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National Commission for Communication and Liberties

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The Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel ( French: [kɔ̃sɛj sypeʁjœʁ də lɔdjɔvizɥɛl] , lit.   ' Superior Audiovisual Council ' ), abbreviated CSA , was a French institution created in 1989 whose role was to regulate the various electronic media in France, such as radio and television. The creation of the Haute Autorité de la Communication Audiovisuelle (High Authority for Audiovisual Communication) was a measure founded in the Socialist Party 's electoral program of 1981, called 110 Propositions for France .

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5-683: The National Commission for Communication and Liberties ( Commission nationale de la communication et des libertés or CNCL ) was a TV and radio regulatory body set up in France in 1986 as the successor to the Haute Autorité de la communication audiovisuelle , and dissolved in 1989 to be followed by the Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel . This French television-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Conseil sup%C3%A9rieur de l%27audiovisuel The CSA replaced

10-513: Is presented to the Council of Ministers under the name "bill relating to the regulation and protection of access to cultural works in the digital age". The merger became effective on 1 January 2022. (as of December 2021) The following pictograms are proposed to the different TV channels. Channels are responsible for displaying the right pictogram depending on the show and its time of broadcast. Note that –18 can be either non-pornographic (like

15-555: The Commission Nationale de la Communication et des Libertés (CNCL), which itself replaced the High Authority for Audiovisual Communication, created in 1982 to supervise the attribution of radio frequencies to the private radio sector, which was judged better than allowing the anarchic creation of the radios libres ("free radios"), mainly composed of amateurs and NGOs. The CSA always acted after content

20-601: The bill relating to audiovisual communication and cultural sovereignty in the digital age examined by the National Assembly in the first half of 2020 would include the merger of the CSA and HADOPI to form the Regulatory Authority for Audiovisual and Digital Communication ( Autorité de régulation de la communication audiovisuelle et numérique ; ARCOM). The bill is put on hold until 8 April 2022 when it

25-522: Was shown on a TV channel or heard on a radio, so it was not an instance of preventative censorship . Notably, the CSA asked the Government of France to forbid Al-Manar TV in 2005 because of charges of hate speech ; it also claimed that MED TV was close to the Kurdish PKK , on grounds not of "evidences" but of "concording elements". On 24 September 2019, Franck Riester announced that

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