Facebook blocks Australians from accessing news on platform : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Facebook blocks Australians from accessing news on platform

Australian publishers can continue to publish news content on Facebook, but links and posts can't be viewed or shared by Australian audiences

Facebook blocks Australians from accessing news on platform

An illustration image shows a phone screen with the "Facebook" logo and Australian newspapers in Canberra, Australia, on February 18, 2021. AAP Image/Lukas Coch/via Reuters



Canberra, February 18

Facebook announced on Thursday that it has blocked Australians from viewing and sharing news on the platform because of proposed laws in the country to make digital giants pay for journalism.

Australian publishers can continue to publish news content on Facebook, but links and posts can't be viewed or shared by Australian audiences, the US-based company said in a statement.

Australian users cannot share Australian or international news.

International users outside Australia also cannot share Australian news.

“The proposed law fundamentally misunderstands the relationship between our platform and publishers who use it to share news content,” Facebook regional managing director William Easton said.


Also read: Anger mounts as Facebook's Australia news ban sweeps up charities, govt pages

Facebook ‘unfriends’ Australia: News pages go dark in test for global publishing

Facebook ‘bully’ move in Australia shows need for regulation: UK media trade body

China defends use of Twitter, Facebook in virus campaign


“It has left us facing a stark choice: attempt to comply with a law that ignores the realities of this relationship, or stop allowing news content on our services in Australia. With a heavy heart, we are choosing the latter,” Easton added.

The announcement comes a day after Treasurer Josh Frydenberg described as “very promising” negotiations between Facebook and Google with Australian media companies.

Frydenberg said after weekend talks with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Sundar Pichai, chief executive of Alphabet Inc and its subsidiary Google, he was convinced that the platforms “do want to enter into these commercial arrangements”.

Frydenberg said he had had a “a constructive discussion” with Zuckerberg after Facebook blocked Australian news.

“He raised a few remaining issues with the Government’s news media bargaining code and we agreed to continue our conversation to try to find a pathway forward,” Frydenberg tweeted.

But communications Minister Paul Fletcher said the government would not back down on its legislative agenda.

“This announcement from Facebook, if they were to maintain this position, of course would call into question the credibility of the platform in terms of the news on it,” Fletcher told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

“Effectively Facebook is saying to Australians information that you see on our platforms does not come from organisations that have editorial policies or fact-checking processes or journalists who are paid to do the work they do,” Fletcher added.

The Australian Parliament is debating proposed laws that would make the two platforms strike deals to pay for Australian news.

The Senate will consider the draft laws after they were passed by the House of Representatives late on Wednesday.

Both platforms have condemned the proposed laws as unworkable. Google has also threatened to remove its search engine from the country.

But Google is striking pay deals with Australian news media companies under its own News Showcase model.

Seven West Media on Monday became the largest Australian news media business to strike a deal with Google to pay for journalism.

Rupert Murdoch's News Corp has since announced a wide-ranging deal.

Rival Nine Entertainment is reportedly close to its own pact and ABC is also in negotiations.

News plays a larger part in Google's business model than it does in Facebook's.

Easton said the public would ask why the platforms were responding differently to the proposed law that would create an arbitration panel to set a price for news in cases where the platforms and news businesses failed to agree.

“The answer is because our platforms have fundamentally different relationships with news,” Easton said.

Peter Lewis, director of the Australia Institute's Centre for Responsible Technology think-tank, said Facebook's decision "will make it a weaker social network.”

“Facebook actions mean the company's failures in privacy, disinformation, and data protection will require a bigger push for stronger government regulation,” Lewis said.

“Without fact-based news to anchor it, Facebook will become little more than cute cats and conspiracy theories." AP


Top News

Polling booths in eastern Nagaland wear deserted look amid shutdown call

Lok Sabha elections: 0% voting in 6 Nagaland districts over separate territory demand

Polling booths in eastern Nagaland wear deserted look amid s...

Iran fires air defence batteries in provinces as sound of explosions heard near Isfahan

Israel attacks Iran's air base, sources say, drones reported over Isfahan

Iran fires air defence batteries at Isfahan air base and nuc...

2 Indian students drown as they fall in river while hiking in Scotland

2 Indian students drown after they fall into river while hiking in Scotland

Their bodies were recovered by a rescue team from the water ...


Cities

View All