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Australia to make Google and Facebook pay for news content

ASSOCIATED PRESS / FEB. 2014
                                The Facebook app icon on a smartphone in New York. The Australian government said, Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS / FEB. 2014

The Facebook app icon on a smartphone in New York. The Australian government said, Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.

ASSOCIATED PRESS /APRIL 2017
                                Google’s mobile phone icon, in Philadelphia. The Australian government said,Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.
2/2
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS /APRIL 2017

Google’s mobile phone icon, in Philadelphia. The Australian government said,Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.

ASSOCIATED PRESS / FEB. 2014
                                The Facebook app icon on a smartphone in New York. The Australian government said, Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.
ASSOCIATED PRESS /APRIL 2017
                                Google’s mobile phone icon, in Philadelphia. The Australian government said,Friday, it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.

CANBERRA, Australia >> The Australian government said on Friday it plans to give Google and Facebook three months to negotiate with Australian media businesses fair pay for news content.

In releasing a draft of a mandatory code of conduct, the government aims to succeed where other countries have failed in making the global digital giants pay for news siphoned from commercial media companies.

Google said Australia’s draft code was a heavy-handed step that could impede the digital economy.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said Google and Facebook would be the first digital platforms targeted by the proposed legislation but others could follow.

“It’s about a fair go for Australian news media businesses, it’s about ensuring that we have increased competition, increased consumer protection and a sustainable media landscape,” Frydenberg said.

“Nothing less than the future of the Australian media landscape is at stake with these changes,” he added.

If the U.S.-based platforms could not agree with the Australian media businesses on pricing after three months, arbitrators would be appointed to make a binding decision, the draft said.

The draft will be open to consultation until Aug. 28, with the legislation to be introduced to Parliament soon after, Frydenberg said.

As well as payment, the code covers issues including access to user data and transparency of algorithms used to rank and present media content.

Breaches of the code could attract penalties of up to 10% of the platform’s annual turnover or a $7.2 million fine.

Google Australia and New Zealand managing director Mel Silva said the code discounts the significant value Google provided in free clicks on publishers’ content.

“Our hope was that the code would be forward thinking and the process would create incentives for both publishers and digital platforms to negotiate and innovate for a better future, so we are deeply disappointed and concerned the draft code does not achieve this,” Silva said in a statement.

“Instead, the government’s heavy-handed intervention threatens to impede Australia’s digital economy and impacts the services we can deliver to Australians,” Silva added.

Facebook Australia and New Zealand managing director Will Easton said in a statement his company was reviewing the code to “understand the impact it will have on the industry, our services and our investment in the news ecosystem in Australia.”

Frydenberg said the motive was not to protect Australian businesses from competition or disruption but to ensure they are paid fairly for original content.

The conservative government is pushing ahead with the changes after the pandemic created an advertising revenue crisis for many Australian media companies.

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