Cape Times

GREATER SCRUTINY CALL REJECTED

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FACEBOOK has rejected an Australian regulator’s recommenda­tion for greater scrutiny over the social network’s advertisin­g market power and the ranking of news articles in customers’ feeds. The proposal by the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) in December, along with a new regulator to police technology giants, is being watched closely in other countries as government­s seek to check their power. “People, not regulators, should decide what they see in their news feeds,” Facebook said in a 76-page submission in an email reply yesterday. “Creating a news ranking regulator for Facebook is not a proportion­ate regulatory solution that will be effective to address the long-standing monetisati­on challenges facing some Australian publishers,” the social media giant said. It added that the commission underestim­ated the level of competitio­n in online advertisin­g markets in Australia, and was mistaken in its belief that Facebook’s aggregatio­n and analysis of users’ data made it powerful. Facebook’s response follows a similar rebuttal from Alphabet’s Google as the companies seek to head off a crackdown that could form a template for curtailing their growing influence in public life around the world. The ACCC had said the enormous market power of firms such as Google, which has a 94 percent share of web searches in Australia, and their opaque methods for ranking advertisem­ents, gave them the ability and incentive to favour their businesses over advertiser­s.

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