The Free Press Journal

FB says it will block news sharing in OZ

- AGENCIES /

Facebook threatened to block Australian publishers and individual­s from sharing news stories on its platform in reaction to an Australian measure that could require it to compensate media organisati­ons for its use of their stories.

The social network said the Australian move would force it to pay arbitrary and theoretica­lly unlimited sums for informatio­n that makes up only a small fraction of its service.

The measure would force Facebook to choose between "either removing news entirely or accepting a system that lets publishers charge us for as much content as they want at a price with no clear limits," the company's managing director for Australia and New Zealand, Will Easton, wrote in a blog post.

Campbell Brown, a former NBC and CNN anchor who now serves as Facebook's vice president of global news partnershi­ps, said the cutoff threat "has nothing to do with our ongoing global commitment to journalism." Brown's post, which cited a variety of individual Facebook programs intended to support news organizati­ons, was titled "Our Continued Commitment to Journalism." Google, meanwhile, issued an open letter that cast the proposed Australian law as a potential threat to individual privacy and a burden that would degrade the quality of its search and YouTube video services, but did not threaten a cutoff.

"Mark Zuckerberg is happy to let Facebook be a tool to spread misinforma­tion and fake news, but is apparently fine with Facebook dropping real news altogether," John Stanton, cofounder of the Save Journalism Project, said in a statement.

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