The New Zealand Herald

Aussie’s shameful Facebook shakedown

- Curtis Barnes comment

Facebook was damned if it did and damned if it didn’t. The company has been heavily criticised for the way it has handled a breathtaki­ng range of issues. Here though, faced with bad policy, Facebook is now condemned both for exposing users to content, and for attempting to leave them alone.

In an opinion piece about Teddy Roosevelt doing something unrelated, the Hon Raynor Asher, QC, attempts to convince us that Facebook preferring not to pay Rupert Murdoch for the privilege of promoting his products is somehow a very bad thing.

This is the same Murdoch of AT&TTime Warner antitrust infamy, not to mention the Fox News Network. That, and that Facebook should also pay to help Australian­s (and the wider world) find upto-date informatio­n about things as varied as Covid-19, crime, and even the weather.

In his own words, “The widespread disseminat­ion of news and opinion is essential for open government. It puts misinforma­tion in balance, and exposes corruption and bad practice.” For a moment it seemed he might conclude that platforms such as Facebook — which vastly amplify the disseminat­ion of news and opinion — are also a public good. In an alternativ­e universe, we might even be paying Facebook for the value provided.

Instead, Asher maintains that not only is Facebook obliged to continue sharing news content, it ought to pay establishe­d media companies. All of this set against the backdrop that, in reality, the news and opinion produced by such companies is consumed much more widely because of platforms such as Facebook, not in spite of it.

Asher then goes on to ask the wrong question: “If there was no mainstream news read by much of our population, where would they find sound informatio­n about affairs of the day?” In doing so, he inadverten­tly reinforces just how essential platforms such as Facebook are in helping people gain rapid access to the news that matters to them.

A better question might be: if there was no mainstream news on Facebook, where would people find sound informatio­n about the affairs of the day? The answer is almost anywhere else. Want to know about the weather? Check your phone or go directly to the weather website. Want to know about new Covid-19 protocols? Go to the government website, or a news site. Go to a different platform. Subscribe to a newsletter. Buy the newspaper.

The fact that this very simple answer is apparently unthinkabl­e gives an indication of just how easy it has become for citizens to get the news they want, thanks to the big platforms.

As it stands, the Australian Government was demonstrab­ly unconcerne­d that Australian­s might lose access to some of these platforms completely, let alone just news content. They knew the legislatio­n might cause one or more of the platforms to cease service to Australia, because that is what the platforms told them.

In the Government’s own words, “it would appear that other digital platforms would be eager to step into a space that was vacated”.

Ironically, given Asher’s comparison to Teddy Roosevelt, the Australian government was so confident that alternativ­e market competitor­s existed, it was prepared to cause the dominant platforms to leave the Australian market entirely. Now that one has tried, we are supposed to believe democracy will crumble.

Most importantl­y in this saga is to note that the Australian government acknowledg­ed the fact that its own legislatio­n might be unlawful.

First, it acknowledg­ed it might be overturned by the Australian High Court. Second, it might breach several of Australia’s internatio­nal trade obligation­s.

Now that an agreement has been reached moderating the incredibly broad scope of the original legislatio­n, and — given the way that Facebook has moderated its approach — the lawfulness of the Australian Government’s policy approach may never be tested.

No doubt, matters such as the Media Council Guidelines and the Broadcasti­ng Standards process are essential for improving the quality of news informatio­n, but it isn’t clear how disincenti­vising the spread of such informatio­n on a platform such as Facebook serves wider democratic goals.

 ??  ?? Curtis Barnes is research director at Brainbox, a research and advisory firm focused on digital technologi­es and law.
Curtis Barnes is research director at Brainbox, a research and advisory firm focused on digital technologi­es and law.

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