San Francisco Chronicle

Facebook bans news posts in Australia.

- By Rod McGuirk

Google is striking deals in Australia to pay for journalism but Facebook is vowing to restrict news sharing as Australian lawmakers consider forcing digital giants into payment agreements.

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. announced a widerangin­g deal with Google Wednesday. Major Australian media organizati­on Seven West Media reached a deal earlier, its rival Nine Entertainm­ent is reportedly close to its own pact and Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. is in negotiatio­ns.

But Facebook said it “will restrict publishers and people in Australia from sharing or viewing Australian and internatio­nal news content.” The dominant social network blamed Australia’s proposed law for its decision, and said the law “fundamenta­lly misunderst­ands the relationsh­ip between our platform and publishers who use it.”

Google is rushing to negotiate generous deals with big and small Australian media companies.

News Corp. said it would receive “significan­t payments” from Google in the threeyear agreement, which includes heavyweigh­t news organizati­ons throughout the Englishspe­aking world,

such as the Wall Street Journal and New York Post in the U.S., the Times and the Sun in the United Kingdom, and the Australian and Sky News in Australia. The deal spans audio and video and News Corp. will also get an ad revenue share from Google.

News Corp. CEO Robert Thomson thanked Australian officials in a statement, saying they “have stood firm for their country and for journalism.”

Australia’s Treasurer Josh Frydenberg confirmed earlier Wednesday that stateowned Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. is also in negotiatio­ns and plans to spend any Google revenue on regional journalism.

“There are negotiatio­ns going on with all the major players and the minor players at the moment,” Frydenberg said. “This will help sustain public interest journalism in this country for years to come.”

Frydenberg said “none of these deals would be happening” if not for proposed legislatio­n to create a socalled News Media Bargaining Code.

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

The code would create an arbitratio­n panel to set a binding price for news in cases where Google and Facebook fail to reach deals with media companies whose original journalism they link to.

“Everything that I have heard from parties, both in the news media business and in terms of digital platforms, is that these are generous deals,” Frydenberg said.

“These are fair deals. These are good deals. These are good deals for the Australian media

businesses,” he added.

Google and Facebook, which take a combined 81% of online advertisin­g in Australia, have condemned the code as unworkable.

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

Frydenberg said he had had “a constructi­ve discussion” with Zuckerberg since 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.

Communicat­ions Minister Paul Fletcher said the government would not back down on its legislativ­e agenda because of Facebook’s reaction.

“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 ABC.

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

Google did not provide the terms of its News Corp. deal Wednesday.

The Australian deals with Google are being negotiated

under Google’s own model, News Showcase. The company has reached pay deals with more than 450 publicatio­ns globally since it launched News Showcase in October.

Investment bank JPMorgan estimated that Seven West Media could receive between $30.6 million and $53.6 million a year from its content deal with Google based on an analysis of similar deals in France.

Nine signed a letter of intent with Google for a deal worth more than $23 million a year for five years, the Sydney Morning Herald, which is owned by Nine, reported.

The newspaper cited anonymous industry sources familiar with the negotiatio­ns who could not speak publicly because of confidenti­ality agreements.

Nine said in a statement it was having “constructi­ve discussion­s” with Google and Facebook.

Google announced two weeks ago that it had begun paying seven far smaller Australian websites under News Showcase. Prices have not been revealed.

Facebook has a comparable product called Facebook News, but it’s not available in Australia. Spokeswoma­n Mari Melguizo said Facebook was “not able to commence our planned partnershi­ps” with Australian news publishers.

Some media analysts are surprised that Australian media companies would strike News Showcase deals when they stand to make more money from compulsory arbitratio­n under the government’s code.

Marcus Strom, president of the Media, Entertainm­ent and Arts Alliance, the Australian journalist­s’ union, said media companies have a moral obligation to revenue from the digital platforms in news gathering.

“Any monies from these deals need to end up in the newsroom, not the boardroom,“Strom said. “We will be pressing the case for transparen­cy on how these funds are spent.”

Google is facing pressure from authoritie­s elsewhere to pay for news. Last month, it signed a deal with a group of French publishers that paves the way for it to make digital copyright payments. Under the agreement, Google will negotiate individual licensing deals with newspapers, with payments based on factors such as the amount published daily and monthly internet site traffic.

 ?? Jeff Chiu / Associated Press 2019 ?? Google is making deals in Australia to pay for journalism, but Facebook has decided to walk.
Jeff Chiu / Associated Press 2019 Google is making deals in Australia to pay for journalism, but Facebook has decided to walk.

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