Wed. Nov 6th, 2024
alert-–-facebook’s-parent-company-meta-refuses-to-renew-commercial-deals-with-australian-news-companiesAlert – Facebook’s parent company Meta refuses to renew commercial deals with Australian news companies

Facebook’s parent company Meta and the n government are at loggerheads again after the tech giant announced it would not renew commercial deals with n news publishers.

The US company also revealed it planned to remove a dedicated news section from the social media site in and the US next year when the current deals expire.

The announcement on Friday comes three years after Facebook banned all news links from being shared to its platform in , in an action that also removed the pages of charities, health pages, and emergency services.

Federal government ministers blasted Meta’s announcement as a ‘dereliction of its commitment’ and said they would seek advice about future action.

The US company also revealed it planned to remove a dedicated news section

The US company also revealed it planned to remove a dedicated news section

Meta announced its decision to walk away from agreements made with n news organisations in a statement on its website, following similar moves with European media organisations in September.

‘We will not enter into new commercial deals for traditional news content in (, France, Germany, the US and UK) and will not offer new Facebook products specifically for news publishers in future,’ the statement read.

The company said it would close the Facebook News feature on its n and US platforms in April and would seek to focus its investments on content such as short-form video as ‘people don’t come to Facebook for news and political content’.

But Meta’s changes stop short of reinstating its short-lived news ban in .

‘People will still be able to view links to news articles on Facebook,’ it said.

‘News publishers will continue to have access to their Facebook accounts and pages, where they can post links to their stories and direct people to their websites in the same way any other individual or organisation can.’

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland slammed the move saying it would affect the news media industry. 

‘It’s an abrogation of responsibility to ‘s news media sector,’ she said. 

‘n news media publishers deserve to be fairly compensated for the investments they make in that’.

Minister Rowland and Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones also issued a joint statement about the Meta’s withdrawal, criticising its change of direction. 

‘Meta’s decision to no longer pay for news content in a number of jurisdictions represents a dereliction of its commitment to the sustainability of n news media,’ the statement said.

‘n news publishers deserve fair compensation for the content they provide.’

The ministers said they would seek advice from the Treasury and the n Competition and Consumer Commission over possible action against Meta’s move, saying deals with tech giants using their content represented ‘a significant source of revenue for n news media businesses’.

‘We will now work through all available options under the News Media Bargaining Code,’ it said.

‘The government will continue to engage with news publishers and platforms through this process.’

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