easyt65
Diamond Member
- Aug 4, 2015
- 90,307
- 61,149
"One of the worldās leading social media companies just cut off news from an entire nation. At first glance it sounds like Facebook run amok but after looking at it Iām not so sure the company doesnāt have a point. Hereās whatās going on. Australia is considering a law aimed at forcing Google and Facebook to pay Australian news sites for stories.
Under the Australian law, Facebook and Google would be required to negotiate āin good faithā with Australian news sites for licenses to link to their contentāsomething they currently do for free. Nondiscrimination rules would require Google and Facebook to treat sites the same whether they have to pay a site for links or not. If negotiations broke down, the disputes would be settled by baseball-style arbitration, where each side puts an offer on the table and a neutral party decides which offer is more reasonable.
In short, Facebook and Google will be required to pay Australian news sites when they send them trafficāand the Internet titans are not allowed to stop linking to Australian news sites to avoid paying."
Let's say the 'Australian Walkabout', a fictitious Darwin news agency, posts a news story on Facebook with an associated link, and Facebook would have to pay a fee to the 'Australian Walkabout' for the story.
Ummmm.....I can see where Facebook has a serious problem with this. Facebook ALLOWS people to share info, news, etc....for free. They aren't going to let an Australian News Agencyposta news storyfor free on their site and then pay the news agency for the story.
Under the Australian law, Facebook and Google would be required to negotiate āin good faithā with Australian news sites for licenses to link to their contentāsomething they currently do for free. Nondiscrimination rules would require Google and Facebook to treat sites the same whether they have to pay a site for links or not. If negotiations broke down, the disputes would be settled by baseball-style arbitration, where each side puts an offer on the table and a neutral party decides which offer is more reasonable.
In short, Facebook and Google will be required to pay Australian news sites when they send them trafficāand the Internet titans are not allowed to stop linking to Australian news sites to avoid paying."
Let's say the 'Australian Walkabout', a fictitious Darwin news agency, posts a news story on Facebook with an associated link, and Facebook would have to pay a fee to the 'Australian Walkabout' for the story.
Ummmm.....I can see where Facebook has a serious problem with this. Facebook ALLOWS people to share info, news, etc....for free. They aren't going to let an Australian News Agencyposta news storyfor free on their site and then pay the news agency for the story.