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While newspapers including The Sun and the Daily Mirror proclaimed that the naked photos had been "banned," that is not strictly true. Prince Harry's office confirmed it had contacted industry watchdog the Press Complaints Commission, which in turn advised newspapers not to publish the pictures. Any paper that ran them risks being chastised by the commission, which can demand a newspaper publish an apology, but has no power to issue fines. They could also potentially be open to an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit from the prince. Once, editors might have risked it, arguing that publishing the images was in the public interest because Harry is a public
-- and publicly funded -- figure. Satchwell acknowledged there was a risk Leveson's inquiry could chill press freedom. But he said newspapers were simply behaving responsibly over Harry. "Of course freedom of the press is vitally, vitally important," he said. "But just because you can publish something doesn't mean that you should."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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