A civil society meeting to co-ordinate further protests against the SABC is scheduled to take place on Monday.
The campaign is being organised by the Right2Know (R2K) campaign and the Save our SABC Coalition.
Last week, R2K Durban spokesman Thabane Miya said protests would continue until SABC chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng resigned.
Journalists from several media outlets protested against censorship outside the SABC’s offices in Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town on Friday.
The picket was also held in support of three journalists who were served with suspension letters in June. They disagreed with an instruction during a diary conference not to cover another R2K protest against censorship outside the public broadcaster’s offices.
Last Monday, acting group CEO Jimi Matthews announced his resignation. He said the environment at the public broadcaster was “corrosive” and that recent changes were wrong.
Motsoeneng has been criticised for his decision that the SABC would no longer air footage of the destruction of property during protests.
The R2K, however, previously said it did not believe the broadcaster’s problems started, nor would they end, with his departure.
“The SABC crisis is rooted in systematic attempts by the political elite to undermine and control key public institutions,” the organisation said.