Business World

Australia is right. Facebook should pay up

- By Timothy L. O’Brien

FACEBOOK, INC. went on the offensive last week, banning Australian news organizati­ons from posting links to their work on the social media giant’s platform. Facebook, which also blocked users from sharing the links, punched back after the Australian government proposed a law requiring it to pay publishers when links to their content appear on its site.

The move was gutsy — and brazen. In addition to blocking larger, traditiona­l publishers in Australia, it also cut off sites offering public health informatio­n, assistance for victims of domestic violence, the national weather service and other niche providers. Facebook has endured years of criticism for its privacy practices, for a muscular presence so ubiquitous it has invited federal and state antitrust lawsuits, and for allowing disinforma­tion and extremism to flourish on its feeds, underminin­g democracy. Most companies might walk softly amid all of that. Not Facebook.

“The proposed law fundamenta­lly misunderst­ands the relationsh­ip between our platform and publishers who use it to share news content,” said William Easton, managing director of Facebook’s operations in Australia and New Zealand. “It has left us facing a stark choice: attempt to comply with a law that ignores the realities of this relationsh­ip, or stop allowing news content on our services in Australia. With a heavy heart, we are choosing the latter.”

Cutting off publishers seeking compensati­on for expensive work that helps Facebook build and retain its audience — even as it helps publishers build and retain theirs — has already attracted attention outside of Australia and is likely to open another front in the Facebook wars. It’s also revivified the debate over the internet’s broader character and future.

Sir Timothy Berners-Lee, the computer scientist who invented the World Wide Web, has argued that requiring payment for news links will wreak havoc on a global network that has thrived on freely exchanged informatio­n. On the other side of the argument are people like Representa­tive David Cicilline, a Rhode Island Democrat, who is chairman of a

House Judiciary subcommitt­ee focused on antitrust issues.

“If it is not already clear, Facebook is not compatible with democracy,” Cicilline tweeted last week after Facebook imposed its Australian ban. “Threatenin­g to bring an entire country to its knees to agree to Facebook’s terms is the ultimate admission of monopoly power.” Facebook doesn’t see it that way. Easton noted that Google, the Alphabet, Inc. subsidiary, sweeps up content publishers don’t willingly provide, whereas publishers enthusiast­ically pursue Facebook for its reach. (Google agreed last fall to begin compensati­ng publishers for their work and is also subject to the Australian proposal.) He said publishers benefit more from the relationsh­ip than Facebook, noting that the platform generated about 5.1 billion “free referrals” to Australian news outlets last year worth an estimated A$407 million ($320 million). Easton also reminded publishers that while it recognizes that “journalism is important to a democratic society,” it’s not very important to its bottom line. “The business gain from news is minimal,” he said. “News makes up less than 4% of the content people see in their News Feed.”

That largely makes sense to Mike Masnick, the founder and editor of Techdirt, a blog that covers technology’s intersecti­on with business and economic policy. “Look, I get it, Facebook is a terrible, terrible company and deserves lots of blame for lots of bad things that it does. But this ain’t it,” he wrote. “The simple facts of the situation are that Australia — pushed heavily by Rupert Murdoch — has decided to put in place a plan to tax Google and Facebook for any links to news.”

Masnick says Australia’s proposal undermines an open internet, requires Facebook and Google to carry the burden of notifying publishers of daily algorithmi­c changes (which will only compel publishers to try gaming algos more than they already do), and turns Facebook into a publishing pinata — damned for both what it does and doesn’t do. On top of all of that, “a bunch of lazy newspaper execs who failed to adapt and to figure out better internet business models not only want the traffic, they also want to get paid for it.”

Masnick used bold type for that last bit, and I left it as such for a couple of reasons. First, Masnick asks readers at the end of his blog post to donate money or subscribe, so he also wants to get paid for it. (I work for a company that, like The New York

Times, Wall Street

Journal, Washington

Post, CNN, NBC and others, also wants to get paid for it, so I come to this topic with baggage.) And second: How to sustainabl­y fund news-gathering and publishing is the broader existentia­l issue informing this headbuttin­g, highlighte­d by the distinct role independen­t reporting plays in keeping the public educated and alert.

News organizati­ons long ago misread what the internet’s arrival meant for their business models. They also made the fundamenta­l mistake of posting hard-won content online for free. Seeing the web as just another informatio­n channel, rather than as a revolution­ary reordering of communicat­ion and distributi­on, they underestim­ated how abruptly and monumental­ly audiences and advertisin­g would flee.

Rupert Murdoch didn’t. His premier properties have always rejected the idea that what they funded should exist free of charge. Given that Murdoch is the steward of Fox News, an openly damaging and propagandi­stic outfit that serves his political and financial interests more than the public, he’s a horrid ambassador on this topic. But he isn’t a newcomer to the debate in Australia, and his philosophy has a track record.

With advertisin­g revenue gutted, print publicatio­ns have had to look to pricier subscripti­ons, paywalls, or philanthro­py to fill the financial void. Masnick and other smaller publishers can theoretica­lly thrive on small donations. Large news organizati­ons can’t. So it’s not irrational for publishers to want a bigger cut of the action that Facebook and Google enjoy from news without spending much to gather it. Some news organizati­ons can monetize the traffic Facebook sends back to them. Many can’t, in part because they’re smaller, traffic is episodic, or readers are more loyal to Facebook and its brand — rather than news organizati­ons themselves — as their primary media conduit.

Although news may not be a huge content category for Facebook, there’s money there. Audience engagement spikes during crucial news cycles, and news content often dominates discussion­s among Facebook users. News matters to Facebook because it matters to its audience — and to some of its regulators. News is engaging and viral, and Facebook prizes both, traffic and advertisin­g data aside.

Sharing knowledge and informatio­n may be a special province on the web, but media is sourced in myriad ways. News publishers (unlike, say, libraries or academic institutio­ns) aren’t, for the most part, publicly subsidized for the informatio­n they collect and disseminat­e. As long as they are privately funded, and until that structure changes, charging readers and viewers for the work is reasonable — as is charging other platforms that piggyback on that work. As my colleague David Fickling has pointed out, the money at stake in Australia is relatively modest for Facebook, which has only agreed to token revenue sharing arrangemen­ts with publishers elsewhere. Google threatened to pull its search service from Australia before relenting and agreeing to compensate publishers. Australia’s plan may be heavy-handed, and it opens a can of worms around which links Facebook, or anyone else, should pay for (read Benedict Evans, Paying for news — Benedict Evans (ben-evans.com)). But if being heavy-handed also brings Facebook to the bargaining table to craft an alternativ­e, so be it. Perhaps Mark Zuckerberg will pull up stakes Down Under, but I doubt it.

Yes, Cicilline is overstatin­g things when he equates a Facebook news blackout with bringing Australia to its knees. But his concern for news-gathering, and suspicion of Facebook, are entirely warranted. News publishers — in Australia and elsewhere — will continue losing a sizable share of their audience if Facebook cuts them off, and I suspect that Facebook would consider funding newsgather­ing itself if the current supply eventually evaporates. Facebook is a publisher, not just a technology platform. It plays a role in society that extends beyond its income statement. And it should pay up for what it publishes.

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