From the CBC:
“Canadians will no longer have access to news content on
Facebook and Instagram, Meta says”
The social media giant Meta has confirmed that it will end
access to news on its social media sites for all Canadian users before Bill
C-18, the Online News Act, comes into force. The tech company made the
announcement on Thursday, the same day the bill received royal assent. The law
will force tech giants like Meta and Google to pay news outlets for posting
their journalism on their platforms.
Meta said it will begin to block news for Canadian users over
the next few months and that the change will not be immediate. "We have
repeatedly shared that in order to comply with Bill C-18 ... content from news
outlets, including news publishers and broadcasters, will no longer be
available to people accessing our platforms in Canada," Meta said in a
media statement.
Now that the bill has received royal assent, the Department
of Canadian Heritage will draft regulations specifying the application of the
act and provide guidance on implementing it. It should take six month for Bill
C-18 to come into force. "A free
and independent press is fundamental to our democracy," Canadian Heritage
Minister Pablo Rodriguez said in a statement. "It levels the playing field
by putting the power of big tech in check and ensuring that even our smallest
news business can benefit through this regime and receive fair compensation for
their work."
In response to Meta's announcement that it would be banning
news content for Canadian users, Rodriguez said in a different media statement
that Meta currently has no obligations under the act and that the federal
government will engage in a "regulatory and implementation process"
following royal assent of Bill C-18. "If the government can't stand up for
Canadians against tech giants, who will?" Rodriguez said. A spokesperson for the minister said his
office had meetings with Facebook and Google this week. "We look forward to further discussions
with the platforms," they said.
Meta first threatened to end access to news content for
Canadian users of Facebook and Instagram earlier this month, in response to the
looming passage of Bill C-18. The company said it was conducting tests on
ending news access for a small percentage of Canadians. Between one and five
per cent of the 24 million Canadians who use Facebook or Instagram were said to
be affected. Meta said this test is still ongoing. "The changes affecting
news content will not otherwise impact Meta's products and services in
Canada," the company said.
On June 7, shortly after Meta announced it would conduct this
product test, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said bullying tactics would not
work with his government. "The fact that these internet giants would
rather cut off Canadians' access to local news than pay their fair share is a
real problem, and now they're resorting to bullying tactics to try and get
their way. It's not going to work," Trudeau said. "Meta and Google know my door is always
open...but, I will not accept threats. That's unacceptable for Canadians,"
says Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez. This as Meta says it would end news
access for Canadians if the federal government's proposed Online News Act
becomes law.
Google, which has said it is considering the same approach as
Meta to blocking news, said in a media statement on Thursday that it is
attempting to "avoid an outcome no one wants." "Every step of
the way, we've proposed thoughtful and pragmatic solutions that would have
improved the bill and cleared the path for us to increase our already
significant investments in the Canadian news ecosystem," Google said. "So
far, none of our concerns have been addressed. Bill C-18 is about to become law
and remains unworkable." The company said it is "continuing to
urgently seek to work" with the government to find a "path
forward."
C-18 meant to lead to 'fair commercial deals': Ottawa The federal government introduced
Bill C-18 in April 2022 with the goal of forcing digital giants, such as Meta
and Google, to compensate news publishers for the use of their content. It
is meant to address the "imbalance" between tech platforms and
Canadian news publications, allowing them to make "fair commercial
deals" without the need for government intervention, the federal
government said. Rodriguez said the amount of money each publisher
receives from these digital giants will be decided by negotiations; there is no
preset formula. If no voluntary arrangement is reached, news businesses
can initiate a mandatory bargaining process and go to a Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) arbitration panel for
a binding decision.
In a media statement, the CRTC, which is tasked with
overseeing the Online News Act, said it will soon share its plan for
implementation and "set up the framework for mandatory bargaining between
these parties." After reaching the Senate, C-18 received amendments and was
sent back to the House. These amendments were an attempt to quell the growing
opposition from media companies that say requiring payment for posting links is
unfair. Rodriguez accepted 10 of the
Senate's 12 amendments and rejected two that he said would have materially
changed the legislation's intent.
Bill meant to support news industry, government says Bill C-18 was pitched as a way to
support an industry that has seen a steady decline since the emergence of the
internet. According to the government, more than 470 media outlets in
Canada have closed since 2008, and at least one-third of Canadian journalism
jobs have disappeared over that same time period. The compensation that
news publishers extract from these digital giants is meant to be used, in large
part, to fund the creation of new content to protect the "sustainability
of the Canadian news ecosystem," the government said. Bill C-18 is
modelled after a similar law in Australia, the country that first forced
digital companies to pay for the use of news content. In response to a
new federal law that obligates social media giants to pay news producers for
their content, Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, says it will
prevent users in Canada from posting or seeing news content on its platforms According
to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, more than $190 million
has been paid already to Australian media companies since the law was enacted
last year. The big winners have been legacy media and larger media outlets.
Tech companies strenuously opposed Australia's efforts to make them pay for news. Google threatened to shut down access to the search engine in that country if the bill went ahead as planned. The company ultimately relented and cut deals with a number of news outlets to avoid a binding arbitration process.
Facebook to restore Australian news pages after deal reached
to amend proposed law Meta, known as Facebook at the time, ended up temporarily blocking
Australians from sharing news stories on its platforms. The Australian
government and the tech company ended up striking a deal and the news ban was
lifted. "Facebook made the
same threat. They left Australia for a week, then they came back,"
Rodriguez told CBC's Power & Politics. "We'll see what they do.
We cannot base our decision as a government on threats from a company."
^ I don’t know how effective this will be, but we will see. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/online-news-act-meta-facebook-1.6885634
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