Global Times - Weekend

Facebook faces Aussie challenge

- Reuters Photo: AFP

Facebook Inc will be “weakened” if it stops Australian­s from sharing news so the company can avoid paying for content under proposed laws, Australia’s top antitrust regulator said on Thursday.

Australia has proposed forcing Facebook and internet search giant Google to pay local media outlets for content, drawing strong opposition from the US companies in a dispute that is being watched by regulators and news organizati­ons around the world.

Facebook said this month it would stop Australian­s from sharing local and internatio­nal news on its website if the proposal becomes law. The company and the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) are still negotiatin­g before the regulator makes a formal recommenda­tion to the government.

“It would be a shame for Australian democracy (and) it would be a shame for Facebook users if they took that course of action,” ACCC Chair Rod Sims said in a speech delivered via Zoom.

“It would also weaken Facebook, so it’s their call,” he added. “If people can’t get their news from Facebook then they’ll go elsewhere to get their news.”

As traditiona­l media outlets lose advertisin­g revenue to internet giants, some countries have tried to

find ways to make such companies pay for the traffic sent to their websites. But Sims said no model had been effective.

The proposal in Australia involves an arbitrator setting the payment terms if an internet company can’t strike a deal with a local media outlet, a provision Facebook has said could force it to pay unlimited royalties.

A Facebook representa­tive was not immediatel­y available to comment on Thursday. Google has said that it has struck content deals with some Australian publishers, but has issued public warnings that the law may hurt its search service.

Sims said Australia’s plan was not a tax on Big Tech or a subsidy for other companies, saying it was “a question of addressing a market power imbalance and one that matters to the future of our society”.

“If you had a competitiv­e market you wouldn’t need this,” he said.

If Facebook quit news sharing in Australia to avoid the law, the company “may get something worse” elsewhere, Sims added.

 ??  ?? A giant digital sign is seen at Facebook’s corporate headquarte­rs campus in Menlo Park, California, on October 23, 2019.
A giant digital sign is seen at Facebook’s corporate headquarte­rs campus in Menlo Park, California, on October 23, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China