Daily Nation Newspaper

AUSTRALIAN WATCHDOG CALLS FOR CONTROLS ON FACEBOOK, GOOGLE

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CANBERRA - Australia's competitio­n watchdog on Friday recommende­d tighter controls on the use of personal data and measures to ease Facebook and Google's dominance of online advertisin­g among a slew of measures to better police the internet giants.

Intensifyi­ng the global drumbeat of calls to regulate some of the 21st century's biggest corporate titans, Australia's government said it would take the watchdog's 23 recommenda­tions and propose regulation by the end of the year. Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg welcomed the report from the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission, although it was unclear which of the recommenda­tions the government may implement. "They need to be held to account and their activities need to be more transparen­t," Frydenberg said as the report was unveiled. "The world has never before seen so much commercial­ly sensitive and personal data collected and aggregated in just two companies," he added. The watchdog said it is estimated that 17 million Australian­s use Facebook each month and spend an average of 30 minutes on the platform a day, while 98 percent of Australian mobile searches use Google. "Our legislativ­e and regulatory framework could not and did not anticipate such a new paradigm," Frydenberg said. While stopping short of advocating the break-up of Facebook and Google, the measures - if adopted in full - would challenge the companies highly profitable business models. They would also open up commercial­ly sensitive algorithms to outside scrutiny, bolster traditiona­l media companies and introduce sufficient­ly large sanctions to deter platforms from misusing data or spreading disinforma­tion. DIGI - a lobby group for Facebook, Google, Twitter and other tech companies - urged regulators to closely examine how the recommenda­tions would "impact Australia's digital industry at large and Australia's global standing as a place to invest in technology."

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