
#Your chronicle game hacked software
“Equally,” the ACM advises journalists and media houses “to put in place the required measures to prevent, detect and block intrusions to their privacy and ultimately their software and hardware infrastructure”. With most media and journalists having an online presence, the regional media entity adds, media enterprises are guarding against certain vulnerabilities, including “exposure to hackers whose sole objective is to destroy channels that offend the public or private status quo and so inhibit the free flow of the truth to the wider public”. The ACM therefore “urges Caribbean governments and their domestic allied institutions” to “take all necessary steps to ensure that journalists are not targetted with the intention of revealing the identity of confidential sources.”

It also says that “In a number of Caribbean countries, State entities have been accused of acquiring spyware that can access digital communication and undermine privacy and other rights.” THE Association of Caribbean Media Workers’ (ACM’s) statement for World Press Freedom Day 2022, says the theme ‘Journalism Under Digital Siege’ is important because the environment within which journalists in the Caribbean operate “is becoming increasingly perilous” as “many countries have already enacted legislation to intercept communication and counter what they regard as cybercrime”.
