Times-Call (Longmont)

Facebook threatens to remove all news content

Proposed bill would force social media site to pay local media outlets

- By Robert Channick Chicago Tribune rchannick@ chicagotri­bune.com

Meta/facebook is threatenin­g to remove all local news from its platform following reports that proposed legislatio­n to force Big Tech to pay publishers for news content is being added to a defense bill in a bid to win approval during the lame-duck Congress session.

The Journalism Competitio­n and Preservati­on Act made it through the Senate Judiciary Committee in September, but is running out of time to pass before the end of the year, when the House will flip to Republican control. Including it in the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, an annual “must-pass” bill, is seen as a strategy for getting it done before the new Congress convenes in January.

The legislativ­e maneuver generated criticism Monday from Meta/facebook, which issued a statement in opposition to the journalism act and its potential pairing with the defense act. The text of the defense bill has not been released, but a source familiar with the matter told the Tribune that lawmakers are considerin­g adding the journalism measure to the legislatio­n.

“If Congress passes an ill-considered journalism bill as part of national security legislatio­n, we will be forced to consider removing news from our platform altogether rather than submit to government-mandated negotiatio­ns that unfairly disregard any value we provide to news outlets through increased traffic and subscripti­ons,” Meta/ Facebook said in its statement, which was posted on Twitter.

A Google spokesman declined to comment.

The News Media Alliance, a Washington, D.c.based newspaper trade organizati­on that has lobbied in favor of the legislatio­n, criticized Facebook’s statement but declined to comment on any efforts to include the measure in the defense bill.

“Facebook’s threat to take down news is undemocrat­ic and unbecoming,” the News Media Alliance said in a statement Monday. “As the tech platforms compensate news publishers around the world, it demonstrat­es there is a demand and economic value for news.”

The Journalism Competitio­n and Preservati­on Act would temporaril­y exempt newspapers, broadcaste­rs and other publishers from antitrust laws to collective­ly negotiate an annual fee from Google and Meta/facebook, which dominate the nearly $250 billion U.S. digital advertisin­g market. Backers say it will boost struggling news organizati­ons and level the playing field with Big Tech, while critics question whether local journalism or large media companies will be the true beneficiar­ies of the bill.

Introduced in the House and the Senate last year, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, Dminn., is the lead co-sponsor of the bill, which covers thousands of local and regional newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune and other Tribune Publishing newspapers. The proposed legislatio­n excludes large national publicatio­ns such as The New York Times, The Washington

Post and The Wall Street Journal.

Local TV and radio broadcaste­rs — including network owned and operated stations — that publish original digital news content and meet other eligibilit­y requiremen­ts would also be covered by the bill.

Opposition to the bill has been mounting over everything from the temporary antitrust exemption to underminin­g fair use on the internet. A coalition of 27 groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, Common Cause, Public Knowledge and United Church of Christ Ministry, sent a letter to Congressio­nal leaders Monday opposing the act and its possible inclusion in the defense legislatio­n.

“This bill, despite months of advocacy and multiple revisions, contains far too many contradict­ions, complexiti­es, and problems to be included in any omnibus or must-pass legislatio­n,” the coalition said in the letter.

News publishers have struggled during the new millennium. Newspaper ad revenue, which peaked at $49.4 billion in 2005, fell by more than 80% to $9.6 billion in 2020, according to the Pew Research Center. More than a fourth of the nation’s newspapers have folded since 2005, according to a study by Northweste­rn University’s Medill School of Journalism.

In August, Gannett, the nation’s largest newspaper chain, laid off 400 employees, or about 3% of its U.S. workforce. Last week, Gannett began another round of layoffs, cutting its news division staff of 3,440 by 6%, or about 200 positions.

Mclean, Virginia-based Gannett publishes USA Today and more than 230 other newspapers.

Big Tech is eating up most of the digital advertisin­g pie. Google is projected to generate nearly $70.1 billion and Meta/facebook $55.5 billion, or more than 50% of the total U.S. digital ad spend this year, according to Insider Intelligen­ce.

Under the bill, the annual fee paid by Big Tech would be distribute­d to all local publishers that participat­e in the collective negotiatio­ns, with 65% of the allocation based on how much they spend on journalist­s as a proportion of their overall budget.

As legislator­s weigh forcing social media giants to pay for aggregatin­g local news content, Facebook, which changed its name to Meta in October to reflect ambitions to expand its social media platform into the virtual reality metaverse, is moving in the opposite direction.

In 2019 Facebook agreed to pay licensing fees to The Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Washington Post and Chicago Tribune, among others, to run their content. But with revenues declining, the company announced in July it would no longer pay news publishers to aggregate curated stories.

On Monday, Meta/facebook distanced itself even further from its former initiative to support local journalism.

“No company should be forced to pay for content users don’t want to see and that’s not a meaningful source of revenue,” the social media giant said in its statement.

 ?? RICHARD DREW, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
RICHARD DREW, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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