Australia passes law to make Google, Facebook pay for news

Australia’s law forcing Google and Facebook to pay for news is ready to take effect, though the laws’ architect said it will take time for the digital giants to strike media deals.
The Parliament on Thursday passed
the final amendments to the so-called News Media Bargaining Code agreed between
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg on
Tuesday.
In return for the changes,
Facebook agreed to lift a ban on Australians accessing and sharing news.
Rod Sims, the competition
regulator who drafted the code, said he was happy that the amended legislation
would address the market imbalance between Australian news publishers and the
two gateways to the internet.
“All signs are good,” Sims said.
“The purpose of the code is to address the
market power that clearly Google and Facebook have. Google and Facebook need
media, but they don’t need any particular media company, and that meant media
companies couldn’t do commercial deals,” the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission chair added.
The rest of the law had passed in
Parliament earlier, so it can now be implemented.
Google has already struck deals
with major Australian news businesses in recent weeks including News Corp. and
Seven West Media.
Frydenberg said he was pleased to
see progress by Google and more recently Facebook in reaching commercial deals
with Australian news businesses.
But Country Press Australia, which
represents 161 regional newspapers across the country, has raised concerns that
tiny publications outside large cities might miss out.
Sims said he was not surprised
that the platforms would strike deals with the large city businesses first.
“I don’t see any reason why anybody should doubt
that all journalism will benefit,” Sims said.
“There things take time. Google and Facebook
don’t have unlimited resources to go around talking to everybody. I think this
has got a long way to play out,” he added.
Chris Moos, a lecturer at Oxford
University’s Business School, said the latest amendments amounted to a “small
victory” for Zuckerberg.
Moos said the legislation would
likely result in small payouts for most Australian news publishers. But
Facebook could again block Australian news if negotiations broke down.
The legislation was designed to
curb the outsized bargaining power of Facebook and Google in their negotiations
with Australian news providers. The digital giants would not be able to abuse
their positions by making take-it-or-leave-it payment offers to news businesses
for their journalism. Instead, in the case of a standoff, an arbitration panel
would make a binding decision on a winning offer.
Frydenberg and Facebook confirmed
that the two sides agreed to amendments to the proposed legislation. The changes
would give digital platforms one month’s notice before they are formally
designated under the code. That would give those involved more time to broker
agreements before they are forced to enter binding arbitration arrangements.
Facebook Vice President of Global
Affairs Nick Clegg said on Wednesday that the Australian law, without this
week’s amendments, would have enabled media conglomerates to “demand a blank
check.”
“Thankfully, after further discussion, the
Australian government has agreed to changes that mean fair negotiations are
encouraged without the looming threat of heavy-handed and unpredictable
arbitration,” Clegg, a former British deputy prime minister, wrote in a
Facebook post.
Facebook last week prevented
Australians from sharing news, but also blocked access to pandemic, public
health and emergency services.
The blockade was a response the
House of Representatives passing the code last week in a form that Facebook
considered “unworkable.”
Clegg said Facebook had “erred on
the side of over-enforcement” and “some content was blocked inadvertently.”
Both Google and Facebook are
pursuing Australian media deals under their own licensing models, Google News Showcase
and Facebook News.
But media executives argue such
deals would not be possible without the threat of an arbitration panel making
final decisions.
Frydenberg said his department will review the code within a year to “ensure it is delivering outcomes that are consistent with government’s policy intent.”