San Antonio Express-News

Google calls Australian news law unworkable

- By Rod McGuirk

CANBERRA, Australia — A Google executive said Friday that a proposed law in this nation to make digital platforms pay for news was unworkable and its proposed arbitratio­n model was biased toward media businesses.

Google Australia and New Zealand Managing Director Mel Silva made her first public comments on the details of the proposed legislatio­n since it was introduced to Parliament last week.

The so-called News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code would force Google and Facebook to compensate Australian news media for the journalism that they link to.

“It forces Google to pay to show links in an unpreceden­ted interventi­on that would fundamenta­lly break how search engines work,” Silva said in a statement.

If a platform and a news business couldn’t agree on a price for news after three months of negotiatio­ns, a three-member arbitratio­n panel would be appointed to make a binding decision for payment.

Silva said “binding arbitratio­n within the code could be a reasonable backstop — so long as the arbitratio­n model is fair.”

However, the proposed arbitratio­n model was “skewed to the interests of one type of business only,” Silva said, referring to media.

Google said it had provided a better model with Google News Showcase.

Google is paying participat­ing publishers to provide paywalled content to News Showcase users through the model that it launched in October.

“By imposing final-offer arbitratio­n with biased criteria, it encourages publishers to go to arbitratio­n rather than reaching an agreement,” Silva said of the government’s model.

Swinburne University media lecturer Belinda Barnet said Google was pushing its own model because it wanted more power in negotiatio­ns.

“It’s a cynical ploy by Google,” Barnet said. “They tried the misinforma­tion campaign, that didn’t work, and now they’re saying: ‘We can do it better. We’re already doing it better.’”

News Showcase “benefits the major players,” while the Australian government wanted payment for news to be “fair and across the board,” Barnet said.

Details of the draft legislatio­n will be scrutinize­d by a Senate committee before it’s voted on.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, who introduced the legislatio­n to Parliament, said in a statement that Google could make a submission to that committee before it releases its finding in February.

Breaches of the code, such as failure to negotiate in good faith, would be punishable by a fine of $7.4 million or the equivalent of 10 percent of annual turnover in Australia.

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