The Standard (St. Catharines)

Legislatio­n coming to force Google, Facebook to pay for news content

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OTTAWA — Canadian Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault is promising legislatio­n this year to ensure tech giants like Google and Facebook pay for the news content they disseminat­e on their platforms.

The promise comes as newspapers across the country are displaying blank front pages in an effort to highlight the “urgent” need for news media companies to be paid for their work.

News Media Canada, which represents newspaper publishers, organized the campaign; it saw some 105 daily and community newspapers across the country displaying blank front pages Thursday, with more to follow Friday.

The organizati­on argues that Canadian news media companies are going under and journalism jobs are disappeari­ng because their content is being used for free by Google and Facebook, which are simultaneo­usly hoovering up 80 per cent of all digital advertisin­g revenue.

It warns that as the producers of real news disappear, “hate and fake news” will be all that’s left.

In a statement, Guilbeault says his department is studying options for a made-in-canada formula for ensuring publishers are fairly compensate­d for the news they produce; his goal is to introduce legislatio­n on the matter this year.

“News is not free and has never been,” he said in the statement Thursday. “Our position is clear: publishers must be adequately compensate­d for their work and we will support them as they deliver essential informatio­n for the benefit of our democracy and the health and well-being of our communitie­s.”

While the tech giants have played a positive role in making news accessible, Guilbeault said, “we must address the market imbalance between news media organizati­ons and those who benefit from their work.”

He added that the government is looking closely at how other countries are handling the issue, specifical­ly France and Australia.

As far as News Media Canada is concerned, Australia has found the right solution: mandatory arbitratio­n if digital companies fail to reach an agreement with news publishers on how much they should be paid.

“These massive American companies get virtually all of the revenue and don’t pay for content,” says the organizati­on’s president, John Hinds, in an open letter to members of Parliament. “Movie content doesn’t work that way in Canada. Music content doesn’t work that way. TV show content doesn’t work that way. So why is news content treated differentl­y?”

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