Gulf Today

FB blackout has exposed challenges inherent in technology

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Afunny thing happened in Australia: millions of people were cut off from vital sources of informatio­n. According to Facebook, only around four per cent of all content viewed on the site’s news feed by Australian­s is journalism. But for many who are staying away from shops or have shunned physical newspapers, the morning scroll through Facebook was their main way of keeping up to date with the news. Globally, around one in four inbound visitors to news websites come through social media plaforms like Facebook.

The ban on news content was put into force by Facebook ater testy, months-long bickering with politician­s in Australia over a planned levy on linking to journalism. Politician­s, having seen the free press routed by the rise of online advertisin­g, which takes a vital funding source away from newspapers, decided it was time for the two biggest offenders – Facebook and Google – to pay something back.

The law, as proposed, would require sites like Facebook and Google to enter negotiatio­ns with news publishers about compensati­ng them for using their content in their search results, and as fodder for their news feed. Politician­s didn’t cap the amount publishers could theoretica­lly ask for. Google folded, but Facebook followed through on its threat to pull the plug on news content in

Australia. What the mass media blackout – which is being subverted by Australian­s posting screenshot­s to news stories they want to talk about on the plaform, rather than linking out to them – has done is expose the challenges inherent in tech: the rise of too-big-to-fail, too-big-to-bring-to-heel plaforms.

Australia’s tech law is objectivel­y bad, even if you think that Facebook is the worst thing in the world and Mark Zuckerberg is a money-hoovering devil trying to eke out as much ad revenue as possible from discerning our tastes by scouring the family photograph­s we post to his plaform. It’s drawn so badly as to give Facebook a semi-rational excuse to have banned vital pages, including the health department of Queensland state.

It’s an augur of what could come elsewhere. Australia is just the farthest along in drating and implementi­ng its legislatio­n designed to throtle the power of the social media giants, years ater it would have been any use. The UK has its online harms legislatio­n curdling into a messy miasma of overregula­tion drawn up by people who have litle understand­ing of how these things work. The European Union keeps brandishin­g the stick of legislatio­n, while the United States’ recent antitrust hearings were designed to skewer Facebook and others.

The last two decades of the world wide web – the rise of hate speech, the election of Donald Trump, the increase in political polarisati­on, fuelled by the plaforms we use every day – have shown us that plaforms cannot police themselves. But currently, politician­s can’t police them effectivel­y, either.

More worryingly, Facebook, Twiter and their ilk have found themselves in an odd, unenviable position: the overwhelmi­ng majority of people who use these plaforms, including the media outlets that have repeatedly overhauled their business models, firing and rehiring journalist­s in a variety of specialism­s to please the sites’ algorithms, believe they are public spaces. Yet they’re not. They’re privately owned.

Plaforms like Facebook are technicall­y well within their rights to boot publishers who refuse to play ball from their servers, though in doing so they perpetuate the lie that they’re still small, independen­t businesses, rather than hulking monoliths that have grown to take on a quasioffic­ial role in our lives. But it is an ugly example of brinksmans­hip in the messy squabble over what role social media plaforms play in our society that has been ongoing for years.

What will be particular­ly interestin­g to see play out in the coming weeks and months is where the balance of power really lies. Chris Stokel-walker, The Independen­t

 ?? Mark Zuckerberg ??
Mark Zuckerberg
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Donald Trump

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