D-Notice
In the United Kingdom, D-Notices are a voluntary system of press censorship. The name stands for the note (meaning "Defence Notice, nowawadays a Defence Advisory Notice, or DA Notice), issued by a committee consisting of representatives of the Government and from the media. They are legally 'advisory' notices, and may be ignored. [1]
However, as Moyra Grant notes, "the guidelines also state pointedly that the D Notice system is a useful reminder of the legal sanctions which may be brought to bear if an editor or producer oversteps the mark. Moreover, pressure to comply can be overwhelming". [2]
The media, she writes, is afraid to push the line too hard, as it might introduce in more severe restrictions and notes "there are currently eight general [kinds of] D Notices (which, incidentally, used to be secret information themselves, but were made public in 1982):
- Defence plans, operational capability, state of readiness and training
- Defence equipment
- Nuclear weapons and equipment
- Radio and radar transmissions
- Cyphers and communications
- British security and intelligence services
- War precautions and civil defence
- Photography etc. of defence establishments and installations
external links
- Moyra Grant, "The D Notice", Serendipity, accessed January 7, 2004.