Corbyn backs UK public tech rival to Netflix and Amazon
● New broadcaster would operate as a ‘sister organisation to the BBC’
A nationalised digital broadcasting corporation could be set up in the UK to rival global tech giants like Netflix and Amazon, Jeremy Corbyn has said.
The BDC (British Digital Corporation) could challenge the control which a handful of online firms have on “huge swathes” of public life, the Labour leader told an audience at the Edinburgh TV Festival yesterday.
The new body would operate as a “sister organisation to the BBC” and could be funded through the licence fee, according to Mr Corbyn, who also proposed a tax on tech giants to fund journalism.
Mr Corbyn said the BDC could “deliver information and entertainment to rival Netflix and Amazon but also to harness data for the public good”. The Government should negotiate with tech companies “to create a fund, run entirely independently, to support public interest media”, the Labour leader added.
If that is not possible “we’ll need to look at the option of a windfall tax on the digital monopolies to create a public interest media fund”, he said.
Mr Corbyn said that “our media is failing” when it comes to news and current affairs.
He also suggested giving journalists the power to elect
0 Jeremy Corbyn delivering his Alternative Mactaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival
editors “when a title or programme gets particularly large and influential”.
The Labour leader also proposed a shake-up of the way the TV licence fee is paid and
set, and called for information about the social class of anyone who creates BBC content to be published, as he delivered his Alternative Mactaggart Lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival.
“The BBC could lead the way by setting best practice with complete transparency on the make-up of its workforce by publishing equality data, including for social class, for all creators of BBC content, whether in-house or external,” he said.
He outlined proposals for an independent fund for public interest journalism paid for by tech giants, which could include Google, Facebook and Amazon.
He also argued that the
licence fee should be modernised for the digital age, with a “fairer and more effective way” to fund the BBC, which he called “a great institution”.
He floated the idea of introducing a digital licence fee – paid by tech companies or through internet service providers – to supplement the existing licence fee, with a view to reducing the cost for poorer households and helping the corporation compete “more effectively”.
Mr Corbyn also proposed the creation of a new independent body to set the licence fee and suggested the BBC should be placed on a permanent statutory footing so that it would be “freed of government control”.