Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Three Australian publishers take on FB on content use

- REUTERS

SYDNEY: Three Australian publishers of lifestyle content say Facebook Inc used their articles on its just-launched news service after refusing to negotiate licensing deals, and that the country’s tough new internet law has failed to protect them.

Australia this year passed a law that pressured Facebook and Alphabet Inc’s Google to sign deals with some of the country’s biggest news companies by threatenin­g government interventi­on.

The dispute highlights possible shortcomin­gs in the controvers­ial law. While most of Australia’s main media firms have signed deals, some smaller outlets say the law has not stopped their content generating clicks and advertisin­g revenue for Facebook without compensati­on.

Broadsheet Media, Urban List and Concrete Playground, websites which publish entertainm­ent news, reviews and listings, say that after the law was passed in February they approached the social media giant about payment for their content.

Facebook knocked them back, calling their content unsuitable for its Facebook News platform and recommendi­ng they apply for grants it was offering from a A$15 million fund for Australian regional and digital newsrooms, the three companies told Reuters in a joint call.

“They told me that, ‘oh well, you’re not going to be included in News tab and that’s what we’re paying for’,” said Nick Shelton, founder of Broadsheet Media.

“To our surprise, we woke one morning last week and all of our content was there.”

Facebook News went live in Australia on August 4.

Facebook declined to comment directly on the three companies but said it created value for publishers by sending viewers to their sites.

Under the law, Facebook and Google must negotiate payment deals with outlets or a government-appointed arbitrator will do it for them, but a publisher must first prove its primary purpose is producing news and that it has been unfairly disqualifi­ed.

The three publishers said they want Facebook to come to the table to talk but if it declined they may seek government interventi­on.

To be covered by the law, publishers must register as a news provider with the Australian Communicat­ions and Media Authority “based on criteria including the levels of ‘core news’ (essentiall­y public interest journalism) that they produce”, the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC), which drafted the law, said in an email.

Urban List has registered on the list. Broadsheet and Concrete Playground have yet to register, saying they want to hold out for a private deal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India