categories (based on 2021 data, published in 2022)|upright=1.5|alt=World map Among the problems the report identified were concentration of the media, commercialization of the media, and unequal access to information and communication. The commission called for democratization of communication and strengthening of national media to avoid dependence on external sources, among others. Subsequently,
Internet-based technologies considered in the work of the commission, served as a means for furthering MacBride's visions. The MacBride report highlighted that there was a "one-way street" of
information. In particular, the MacBride report criticized the visual
image that
news agencies and
mass media nurtured about
developing countries in Western countries, which enjoyed a high degree of
industrialization. The MacBride report lamented that the quality of "communicative content" had started to guide the
academy in the scientific
discourse. The commission presented a preliminary report in October 1978 at the 20th General Conference of UNESCO in
Paris. The commission's seminal session on new technologies to address the identified problems, was hosted by India at
New Delhi in March 1979. The final report was delivered to M’Bow in April 1980 and was approved by consensus in the 21st General Conference of UNESCO in
Belgrade. The commission dissolved after presenting the report. ==Reaction by UN member states==