Kuwait Times

US urges Australia to abandon news payment plan for tech giants

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SYDNEY: The United States has urged Australia to abandon its plan to force Google and Facebook to pay media outlets for their news content, saying there could be “long-lasting negative consequenc­es” for consumers and companies.

Australia wants to force the US tech giants to pay local media organizati­ons for hosting news content or face millions of dollars in fines, in one of the most aggressive moves globally to check their power.

It will apply to Facebook’s “News Feed” and Google searches, prompting the digital firms to threaten to limit the services they offer Australian­s. In a submission to an Australian Senate inquiry in the draft legislatio­n, the Office of the US Trade Representa­tive called it a “burdensome” plan that will “exclusivel­y target” two American companies “without having first establishe­d a violation of existing Australian law or a market failure”.

“The US government is concerned that an attempt, through legislatio­n, to regulate the competitiv­e positions of specific players in a fast-evolving digital market, to the clear detriment of two US firms, may result in harmful outcomes,” the submission says. “There may also be long-lasting negative consequenc­es for US and Australian firms, as well as Australian consumers.”

The submission, dated January 15, argues the plan’s mandatory arbitratio­n process to determine compensati­on for news businesses is “fundamenta­lly imbalanced” in their favour, as news production costs must be considered but not the costs incurred by digital platforms. It also says the world-first rules “could raise concerns with respect to Australia’s internatio­nal trade obligation­s” by excluding foreign media from the compensati­on scheme.

The US submission urges Australia to suspend its legislativ­e push to implement the rules this year to allow for more research and if necessary embrace a voluntary code of conduct instead.

“Australia should again consider promoting a voluntary code of conduct supported by, as appropriat­e, targeted regulation­s developed in an open and transparen­t process,” it says. Canberra’s initiative has been closely watched around the globe, as news media worldwide suffer in an increasing­ly digital economy where advertisin­g revenue is overwhelmi­ngly captured by big tech firms.

It has received broad support from Australian media organizati­ons, with many also being hit hard by a drop in revenue during the coronaviru­s pandemic. The US federal and state government­s meanwhile have launched a series of antitrust proceeding­s against Google and Facebook. The Australian Senate inquiry is due to begin public hearings on Friday. — AFP

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