Canadians no longer able to share or view news articles and other content by publishers and broadcasters, including international outlets. Online News Act requires tech giants to compensate Canadian news outlets for content shared on their platforms.

  • Woofcat
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    1 year ago

    “Without access to real fact-based news created by real journalists, Facebook will become far less attractive to users and advertisers,” Deegan said in a statement. “We expect more and more advertisers and their agencies will begin pulling advertising from the platform in response to this unilateral, undemocratic, and unreasonable move.”

    This is complete horseshit. How is it undemocratic, it’s a private company and they’re free to do what they want. Canadian Government decided to mandate that by linking you owe a share of your profit. This is not how the internet works. No-one forced the CBC to create an instragram account and maintain it, sharing their own news on the platform.

    If you demand to be paid for something, they’re free to not pay for it. Welcome to the real world where you can’t just dictate things to people and expect them to take it.

    • Feirdro@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The problem is that what Facebook does is harmful to society because it is using economic power to destroy a public good—journalism.

      Sure, Facebook can do it. Should they be allowed to? Fuck no.

      • Woofcat
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        1 year ago

        How is it destroying a public good?

        The public good is being destroyed by themselves. They’ve been acquired and are running 90% AP Wire service pieces. My local news in a top 10 CMA area is basically nothing but opinion pieces.

        Our news has been declining for years as people have moved away from a subscription model. People don’t wake up on Saturday morning and read a paper cover to cover anymore and they have failed to adapt.

        • Feirdro@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s like you’re saying, to a man who has been gut shot, “you should just adapt more. “ — There’s no route for them to adapt. Corruption in small and big cities is growing, and there is no one to shed light on it.

          • Woofcat
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            1 year ago

            So what you’re saying is there is no model besides complete subsidy for news to exist?

            It would be impossible for them to you know build a subscription model where you get access to all of their news sites for one fee? Kinda like credit unions do with their ATM networks.

            Perhaps offering better value to consumers and incentivize upsells rather than demote them. As someone who had a paper version of the economist they tried /real/ hard to convert me to digital only. Which is a far worse value proposition.

      • NormandyEssex@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Facebook isn’t destroying journalism. All those news links have been shared and posted on Facebook, driving traffic to those news websites. Now the Canadian government passed a law that is hurting the traffic to those news websites.

        • ahal
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          1 year ago

          The law is BS, no argument there. But Facebook and Google are absolutely destroying news. They’re each operating a rigged market where they are both the broker and the seller. They eat into everyone’s profits to make themselves fabulously rich. The only reason news outlets play the game is because not doing so would be even worse.

          Imo the only solution is to regulate the ad markets that they’re both running. Not this dumb link tax.

    • Candelestine@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Exactly. They are free to democratically make the new law, and facebook is free to no longer feature the articles if they don’t want to pay.

      I see no problems here.