New York Post

Canada Joins the Fight vs. Facebook

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Facebook’s outrageous bid to blackmail Australia into dropping its efforts to make tech companies pay for journalism isn’t working. Indeed, Canada will follow its Commonweal­th cousin and require that tech giants pay for the news that helps drive users to their highly profitable sites.

Steven Guilbeault, Canada’s minister of Canadian heritage, called Facebook “highly irresponsi­ble” last week for barring users from sharing Australian news and even blocking public-service pages that provided COVID info and bushfire warnings. He’s drafting legislatio­n similar to Australia’s.

“Canada is at the forefront of this battle,” Guilbeault said, vowing his government won’t be intimidate­d. He recently met with ministers from Australia, France, Germany and Finland to develop a coalition particular­ly targeted at getting Facebook and Google

to pay “fair compensati­on for media.”

“We believe that there’s real strength in unity on that,” he said, noting the coalition could rise to 15 members. “Is Facebook going to cut ties with Germany, with France, with Canada, with Australia and other countries that will join? At a certain point, Facebook’s position will be completely untenable.”

He’s right: Facebook can’t keep making millions off the hard work of journalist­s if countries band together and force it to pay up. Google, which just announced a revenue-sharing deal with News Corp., the largest owner of newspapers by circulatio­n in Australia (and The Post’s parent company), is already in discussion­s with Canadian companies.

Congress and the Biden administra­tion should be rushing to join Guilbeault’s coalition.

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