Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Global uproar as Facebook blocks news in Australia

Calls grow for govts across world to limit the market power of Big Tech companies

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

SYDNEY: Facebook faced a worldwide backlash from publishers and politician­s on Thursday after blocking news feeds in Australia in a surprise escalation of a dispute with the government over a law to require it to share revenue from news.

Facebook wiped out pages from Australian state government­s and charities as well as from domestic and internatio­nal news organisati­ons, three days before the launch of a nationwide Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme.

Though the measure was limited to Australia, denunciati­ons came from far afield, with politician­s elsewhere describing it as an attempt to put pressure on government­s that are considerin­g similar measures around the world.

Facebook’s actions “will only confirm the concerns that an increasing number of countries are expressing about the behaviour of Big Tech companies who think they are bigger than government­s and that the rules should not apply to them,” Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison wrote on his own Facebook page.

The dispute centres on a planned Australian law that would require Facebook and Alphabet’s Google to reach commercial deals to pay news outlets whose links drive traffic to their platforms, or agree a price through arbitratio­n.

Facebook said it had blocked a wide swathe of pages because the draft law did not clearly define news content. It said its commitment to combat misinforma­tion had not changed, and it would restore pages that were taken down by mistake.

“The actions we’re taking are focused on restrictin­g publishers and people in Australia from sharing or viewing Australian and internatio­nal news content,” a company spokesman said.

The head of the British parliament­ary committee overseeing the media industry, Julian Knight, was among politician­s abroad who thought the message was aimed far beyond Australia. “This bully boy action that they’ve undertaken in Australia will I think ignite a desire to go further amongst legislator­s around the world,” Knight said.

“They’re almost using Australia as a test of strength for global democracie­s as to whether or not they wish to impose restrictio­ns on the way in which they do business. So, we’re all behind Australia.”

News publishers saw Facebook’s tactics as evidence that the company, which also owns Instagram and Whatsapp, cannot be trusted as the gatekeeper for their industry. Henry Faure Walker, chairman of Britain’s News Media Associatio­n industry group, said banning news during a global pandemic was “a classic example of a monopoly power being the schoolyard bully, trying to protect its dominant position with scant regard for the citizens and customers it supposedly serves.”

The head of Germany’s BDZV news publishers’ associatio­n, Dietmar Wolff, said: “It is high time that government­s all over the world limit the market power of the gatekeeper platforms.”

Facebook shares traded down 1.5% on Thursday.

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