Fiji Sun

Facebook Opposes Australian Media Calls For Regulation

The inquiry comes at a sensitive time for FB, which has come under fire globally after it admitted that the personal data of up to 87 million people worldwide - including more than 300,000 Australian­s - were improperly shared with a British political cons

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Tech giant Facebook has opposed calls by Australian media companies for digital platforms to be regulated, amid an inquiry into their impact on competitio­n in news and advertisin­g markets.

The government tasked the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission earlier this year with assessing whether platforms such as Facebook and Google were using their market power in commercial dealings to the detriment of users, news media and advertiser­s.

Australian media groups, like their peers worldwide, are losing circulatio­n and advertisin­g revenues to digital competitor­s. Australian media tycoon Kerry Stokes, the head of major commercial broadcaste­r Seven, on Monday urged Canberra to take “serious action” against the two online titans.

“The government must act decisively to curtail the frightenin­g power and influence these companies have,” Mr Stokes told The

Australian newspaper.

“The duopoly of Facebook and

Google now control over 80 per cent of the global digital ad market, taking away advertisin­g dollars from local media without any of the controls and rules we must adhere to, creating an uneven playing field.”

The industry body representi­ng

commercial free-to-air television networks, Free TV Australia, echoed such views in its submission last Friday, saying the two companies were virtual monopolies, but had “very little regulatory oversight”.

The inquiry comes at a sensitive time for Facebook, which has come under fire globally after it admitted that the personal data of up to 87 million people worldwide - including more than 300,000 Australian­s - were improperly shared with a British political consultanc­y.

Facebook said in its submission to the inquiry, sent to AFP on Monday, that rapid technologi­cal changes such as media digitalisa­tion “makes them a challengin­g subject for regulatory interventi­on”.

The American firm added that “consumers often have the most to gain from market disruption­s caused by technologi­cal change and the most to lose from interventi­ons that are designed to protect particular business models from the effects of those changes”.

Google, which released its submission to the inquiry on Monday, said it was consumers who would determine the future of news and added that it partnered with publishers such Australia’s Fairfax

Media to support access to informatio­n.

 ??  ?? The Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission had been tasked with assessing whether platforms like Facebook were using their market power in commercial dealings to the detriment of users, news media and advertiser­s.
The Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission had been tasked with assessing whether platforms like Facebook were using their market power in commercial dealings to the detriment of users, news media and advertiser­s.

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