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Australia's Standoff Against Google and Facebook Worked - Sort Of (arstechnica.com) 48

Remember when Google threatened to leave Australia if the country implemented a "news media bargaining code" forcing social media platforms to pay news publishers? Wired reports: Google and Facebook did not leave; they paid up, striking deals with news organizations to pay for the content they display on their sites for the first time. The code was formally approved on March 2, 2021... One year after the media code was introduced, Google has 19 content deals with news organizations and Facebook has 11, according to [Australia's communications minister Paul] Fletcher. Now countries around the world are looking at Australia's code as a blueprint of how to subsidize the news and stop the spread of "news deserts" — communities that no longer have a local newspaper.

Canada is expected to propose its own version in March. Media associations in both the U.S. and New Zealand are calling for similar policies. Reports suggest the UK culture secretary, Nadine Dorries, is also planning to require platforms to strike cash-for-content deals.

The international interest has prompted fierce debate about how well Australia's code works.

"We know it works, we can see the evidence," says Fletcher. He points to how the deals are funding journalism in rural areas. Broadcaster The ABC said its deals with Facebook and Google enabled it to hire 50 regional journalists. Google, however, disagrees. It has accused the media code of stifling media diversity by giving media giants a better deal than smaller publishers. "The primary benefactors of such a code would be a small number of incumbent media providers," Google said in a submission to the U.S. Copyright Office, which is currently reviewing its own media laws....

The criticism of Australia's system focuses on its lack of transparency, which means that media companies cannot compare notes on the deals they are offered and there is a lack of clarity on which outlets are entitled to negotiate.... Concerns about the code's flaws are leaking into Canada, where Justin Trudeau's Liberal Party is drafting its own Australia-style legislation. "We're locking down the incumbent publishers, and we're locking down Google and Facebook's dominance as opposed to countering the dominance that exists on both sides," says Dwayne Winseck, journalism professor at Canada's Carleton University.... Yet Canada's news industry is willing to overlook these limitations because it considers the cash as a lifeline, according to Paul Deegan, president and chief executive of News Media Canada.... They are running out of time to save some of the media landscape, he explains — 40 newspapers have closed permanently since the start of the pandemic. "We've got a number of titles and even chains of titles that are quite literally teetering on the brink."

Deegan agrees the code isn't perfect. This is not a magic bullet, he says, "this is a badly needed Band-Aid."

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Australia's Standoff Against Google and Facebook Worked - Sort Of

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  • Social media isn't news, should not fund news, should not fund lack of news in rural areas. If a news company can't adapt to the digital world, they should die.

    The Chicago Tribune was bought out by finance company that said they could monetize it more, and we digital subscribers were hit with a more than treble rate... so we all cancelled en mass. Now it's in deep shit and it should be. Someone thinks social media should prop that and similar up?

    • They see a company with billions of dollars and want to take it. There is really nothing more to this, and any explanation they give is just an excuse.
      • Re:whta nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gravewax ( 4772409 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @07:54PM (#62310183)
        Google and facebook are a cancer eating away at news media replacing it with social BS. Its not an excuse, the reality is social media is starving real news and journalism and we are all worse off for it. No idea what the answer is but something needs to be done, Australia's approach is one potential model/answer. I am sure news media is open to other solutions, in this instance the target is the organizations profiting from their demise.
        • Very true. Only dumb people fail to realize that the 'engagement' algos of google FB twitter etc have screwed up news so completely we have a new category called fact checkers or fake news checkers, we see 100x disruptive flame wars on every social channel incl slashdot driven solely by algos learning to predict which humans at that point of time are ripe for useless arguments and what PoV to show them to trigger that response.

          All for the KRA KPI of engagement leading to ad revenues or valuation.

          The fact th

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'd say that Google and social media in general have increased access to news. A lot of people just ignored it or didn't see stories because they didn't buy that newspaper or visit its homepage regularly. Now the news people see is a lot more diverse, going from basically one or two sources to several thanks to linking and social posts.

          Of course bad actors have risen to take advantage of the weaknesses in this system, particularly it's lack of resilience to fake news and the fact that people you know postin

    • Social media isn't news

      completely agree, hence googles and facebooks replacement of real news with Social media needs to stopped.

      • Neither company has done any such replacement; retards reading social media as news don't make it so.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Things like the comment section of youtube are a sort of social media.

        • google absolutely is a social media company, whether that be through youtube, chat or comments sections, they are all forms of social media designed to create more engagement with google and less with everyone else.
    • Social media isn't news, should not fund news, should not fund lack of news in rural areas

      This isn't about social media, it's about news. If you derive a lot of advertising income from pages that link to news, but you don't produce any of that news, should you contribute to the investigative reporting, the writing the fact checking (if any) and the hosting of that news?

      If a news company can't adapt to the digital world, they should die.

      Financially successful adaptation has meant getting rid of most reporters, scientifically literate ones first, and producing human interest or false stories loaded with native advertising. News Corporation in particular seems has

    • If advertising funded search, social media, messaging services, etc., aren't news then they should stop using news that they haven't produced or paid for to attract users to their services & to replace the news producers' advertising with their own. It's quite clearly ad supported piracy on a massive scale & shouldn't continue as it is. I hope more countries pass similar laws & improve transparency & access for smaller, independent news agencies.
    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      So Google should be able to take entire paragraphs from a newspaper that is hasn't contributed anything to and use it to drive advertising dollars to Google's site?
      The same question applies to Facebook.
      How exactly is a new company supposed to compete with that? Maybe if Google and Facebook had contributed something to the news company that they "stole" the story from your subscription wouldn't have seen a three fold increase.

  • by blarkon ( 1712194 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @07:00PM (#62310051)

    As Bruce Sterling said "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by Google"

    Long form methodical journalism died on Google's ethos that no one should actually have to pay anything for good information because information "wants to be free". As long as Google was getting a small fraction of the minimal income left on the table, getting a small cut over everyone's pennies meant they still made billions.

    So today's journalism is like yesterday's open source documentation. Some of the stuff that's done for free is great but the people we needed to have doing it to function as the immune system for our society have moved onto more reliable and rewarding methods of being remunerated, such as cleaning septic tanks.

    • Google does not show ads on the news.google.com page.
      More likely, it was the loss of classified ad revenue to carsales.com.au and realestate.com.au

      As to regional newspapers, why did the big corporations buy them up and then shut them down?
      Perhaps removing competition, or they planned to shut them down all along, as it was cheaper to run them online from a central office... more profit!

      This lens is telling: when it comes to media ownership consolidation, the big media companies argue that the internet provid

      • Buying up the competition? Unlikely. More like short-term growth at any cost. Small, regional news agencies are the ones that actually produce original news. When you close those down, you cut off valuable sources of content. Then you're left with official sources, i.e. corporations, governments, & wealthy, powerful people who get to completely dominate the news landscape for their own nefarious benefit. It doesn't matter which way you lean politically, just think of any rich, influential assholes that
      • Google earns its money in ways that don't depend on using the newspapers snippets on news.google.com

        1) Ads on searches
        2) Ads on other company's web sites, throught Adsense's targeted advertising service

        This (plus the loss of classified revenue to realestate.com.au and carsguide.com.au) cuts into the pool of advertising money that would otherwise go to newspapers.

        Most copyright protection focuses on 'cease and desist'. Why is it that the Australian law blocked Google from delisting the newspapers? Because Go

    • by louzer ( 1006689 )
      Journalists are liars anyway, so why pay them to lie to us?
  • by beepsky ( 6008348 )
    This law is total BS.
    If obsolete media can't turn a profit it should fucking die.
    The only reason this law exists is because all the media in Australia is biased towards supporting the ruling party, and they don't want to lose that power.
    • One name... Murdoch That shall be all.
    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      If social media can't survive without stealing news from other sites then they should "fucking die" as well. Maybe if Facebook and Google didn't copy the news from other sites to drive advertising sales then there wouldn't need to be any laws forcing Google and Facebook to kick back a few dollars to the news organizations they are getting their news from.

      • A hyperlink isn't stealing a webpage, retard
        • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

          If all they used was a hyperlink I would agree with you. The problem is that they also copy whole sections of the articles from news sites so there is no reason for a person to actually visit the original site.

          I guess I could add a rebuttal insult but I can't be bothered to stoop to that level.

  • Posting from one of the dryest places on earth, I wat to live in a "news desert" because I rather be uninformed than misinformed
  • by Moloth ( 2793915 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @07:48PM (#62310175)

    The problem was that people just read the news on google and didn't bother going to the newspapers sites to see the advertising. This meant that google got the content and eyeballs for free. If google paid even a little bit for the news, the publishers wouldn't go broke, google gets quality news and the world is better for it.

    • by stikves ( 127823 )

      That is not actually true.

      Google News only shows titles, and a small descriptive summary of the articles. They are specifically designed to balance between giving enough information to users, but not harm our partners. Publisher relations are paramount.

      Ah, yes I used to work on Google News.

  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Sunday February 27, 2022 @07:54PM (#62310185)
    Most Australians supported this, especially after Facebook thought they could threaten us and tried to sabotage government services in the process.

    It has accused the media code of stifling media diversity by giving media giants a better deal than smaller publishers

    Nothing's stopping you from giving smaller publishers better deals. You weren't giving them deals in the first place.

    • Isn't one of Australia's biggest media outlets owned by the Australian government? Is there some reason to charge a search engine for showing Australian taxpayers information they already paid for just because it isn't on a State-owned website? That sounds like a scam to me.
      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        Isn't one of Australia's biggest media outlets owned by the Australian government? Is there some reason to charge a search engine for showing Australian taxpayers information they already paid for just because it isn't on a State-owned website? That sounds like a scam to me.

        Owned, by the government, no.

        The ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) is owned by the people of Australia, not it's state and it's mandate is to provide education and entertainment to Australians. Attempting to touch it would be a death sentence for any government.

        Also the ABC wasn't pushing this rent seeking... It was Murdoch who owns most of Australia's media. Murdoch would be happy to see the ABC burn as it's his biggest competitor and doesn't follow Murdochs narrative (Murdoch still thinks of

  • One high quality, small independent media outlet here in Australia has a good collection of articles about this corrupt media code:

    https://www.michaelwest.com.au... [michaelwest.com.au]
    https://www.michaelwest.com.au... [michaelwest.com.au]
    https://www.michaelwest.com.au... [michaelwest.com.au]

    Do not copy this code. It is a bribe for old media to make them keep continue to publish content supporting the government.

  • Print media has been dying for a LONG time.

    In the 1970s, most small towns had some form of local paper that was published at least weekly. Locally, we had a daily and a number of weekly "shopper papers".

    By the 1980s, the daily had been bought out by a regional holding company and folded into a paper that kind of covered local new from time to time. Much of that was press releases, meeting notices, obituaries, and public notices.

    The drop in local content caused people to re-evaluate whether the increasing co

  • We know they aren't pulling out of anywhere.
    • I really wish Facebook, at least, had stuck to it's guns regarding Australia.

      As an Australian I'd be perfectly happy with no "news" on Facebook since I don't read "news" on Facebook, I go to media websites.

      That said, if our ABC has been able to employ 50 regional reporters, that's a good outcome I suppose.

    • Except they have in the past repeatedly. I fully expected Google to pull out, they did the same thing in Spain, delisting all Spanish media outlets.

      The thing is, they will only ever pull out over a minor issue. The threats can be taken seriously on matters of commercial disagreements in a small aspect of a service, but they can't be taken seriously when it comes to industry and business defining matters such as laws governing the collection and processing of data.

      If Google says they'll delist Murdoch, yeah

  • both have massive State-owned broadcast outlets. The (Australian) ABC, quoted in the article claiming they were able to hire 50 more reporters, is STATE OWNED! So, one good question is "why is the ABC complaining, it exists as a public service that shouldn't care how the public consumes what it serves, right?" Another is, "Is the Australian government just trying to extort more cash from google/etc. than they can get from just taxes?"
  • What's the point in google news displaying a headline, and one sentence, if when I follow the link, the actual site demands payment?

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