New York Post

A power struggle between Big Tech and the people

- RACHEL BOVARD Rachel Bovard is the senior director of policy at the Conservati­ve Partnershi­p Institute and a senior adviser to the Internet Accountabi­lity Project.

ON Wednesday, Facebook launched a capital strike against the country of Australia.

Rather than continue negotiatio­ns with Australia regarding paying for the news content circulatin­g on its platform, Facebook decided to pull up stakes. Within hours, the company announced it would “restrict publishers and people in Australia” from sharing or viewing news content. This restrictio­n was also global — Facebook users the world over would now be prohibited from posting links from Australian news publishers.

In other words, a sovereign national government attempted to assert itself against Facebook. And in response, Facebook canceled the country.

The details of this dispute largely concern ad revenue; details that are as complex as they are mundane.

But to characteri­ze Facebook’s actions as merely those of a private company engaging in contract negotiatio­ns wildly shades the reality of the near-hegemonic power Facebook has amassed over the global flow of informatio­n.

Facebook consistent­ly polls as a major news source in countries around the world. In poorer countries like Myanmar, it is virtually indistingu­ishable from the Internet itself, which is why Myanmar’s government was able to successful­ly wield the platform to incite a genocide in 2018.

In countries the world over, Facebook has intentiona­lly wound itself around the infrastruc­ture of how societies consume news, transmit informatio­n, and speak to one another. It has become a chokepoint for vital informatio­n. What is now clear is how easily that power can be weaponized on Facebook’s behalf.

Within hours of Facebook’s announceme­nt, the Facebook pages of Nine, News Corp. and the government-funded Australian Broadcasti­ng

Corp., which acts as a central informatio­n source during natural disasters, were blank. So, too, were the Facebook pages of major regional health department­s, where a quarter of the country’s 25 million people regularly gather informatio­n regarding COVID-19.

As bushfires rage across the country, the Facebook page of the Bureau of Meteorolog­y was also wiped clean. Regional Department of Fire and Emergency Service offices were prevented from posting emergency bushfire warnings.

The extent of Facebook’s power allows it to threaten a country’s government by holding hostage massive amounts of its social infrastruc­ture. What we are witnessing is hardly a contractua­l dispute, but a power struggle between a sovereign self-government and a private corporatio­n so dominant it exists as a hegemon in its own right.

It is very much a proxy for how global government­s and their citizens are struggling with Big Tech companies who, by controllin­g the flow of informatio­n, are shaping the very boundaries of free and democratic societies.

How this dispute ends, in Australia and the world over, will tell us who rules: Is it the people, speaking through their self-government, or the tech authoritar­ians, who arrogantly wield their power as unaccounta­ble private superstate­s, to whom we all must yield?

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