SYDNEY—Australian legislation effectively requiring
Facebook Inc.
and Google to pay news outlets for content cleared its last major parliamentary hurdle, capping a multiyear effort that could set a global precedent for regulating the tech giants’ relations with publishers.
As its spat with the Australian government over the proposed media code deepened, Facebook last week followed through on a threat to remove news from its platform in the country. After the government agreed to small changes to the legislation, Facebook said Tuesday that the news would be restored.
In general, the code compels tech companies and news publishers to submit to binding arbitration if they can’t reach a deal on payment. The amendments announced Tuesday include requiring an additional round of negotiation before binding arbitration kicks in, as well as more acknowledgment of any deals Facebook reaches with publishers on its own.
Alphabet Inc.’s
Google also initially opposed the legislation, at one time threatening to shut down its search engine in Australia. Recently, though, it opted instead to sign content deals with a number of publishers—including
which owns big newspapers in Australia as well as Dow Jones & Co., the publisher of The Wall Street Journal.
News Corp has supported the law.
Parliament’s upper chamber, the Senate, passed the legislation with the Facebook amendments late Wednesday. It will now return to the lower chamber, the House of Representatives—which earlier passed the unamended version—for a vote as early as Thursday. Prime Minister
Scott Morrison’s
center-right government effectively controls the lower chamber.
The code will become law when it is signed by Australia’s governor-general, the representative of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, Australia’s head of state.
Australia’s effort to compel the tech companies to pay for news has been watched globally, and there are signs of momentum for similar legislation in other countries. In Canada, for example, one minister has said his government intends to introduce measures. Canadian Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau
recently spoke with Mr. Morrison about potential regulatory cooperation.
Both Google and Facebook have previously paid for news in some cases. News Corp already has a commercial agreement to supply news through Facebook. Google has signed deals with more than 500 publications in a dozen countries, including Germany, the U.K. and Australia, for a product called News Showcase, and it has pledged $1 billion over three years to such licensing deals.
Australian officials have previously said that the code’s purpose is to encourage the tech companies and media outlets to strike deals on their own, after media companies complained that the digital platforms’ market power meant they had no incentive to negotiate.
The tech giants have argued that when their platforms send users to news websites, publishers benefit. Other business groups and some computer scientists have also raised concerns about the law.
Write to Mike Cherney at mike.cherney@wsj.com
Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
24World Media does not take any responsibility of the information you see on this page. The content this page contains is from independent third-party content provider. If you have any concerns regarding the content, please free to write us here: contact@24worldmedia.com
Marnus Labuschagne Caught Off-Guard By ODI Captain Call After Steve Smith Snub
Everyone Is Looking Forward To It, The Standard Will Be Very High – Jacques Kallis On CSA’s SA20
Danushka Gunathilaka Granted Bail On Sexual Assault Charges
Ramiz Raja Sends Legal Notice To Kamran Akmal For Defamatory, False Claims Against The Board
Harbhajan Singh Reckons Mumbai Indians Should Release Kieron Pollard Ahead Of The IPL Auction 2023
Ian Bishop Praises Sam Curran For His Performances On Bouncy Australian Tracks
Why Choose A Career In Child Psychology?