The matter is being watched closely around the world as it represents the biggest challenge so far to the way the US tech giants use news.
Facebook said in the first five months of 2020 it sent 2.3 billion "clicks" to Australian news websites
Facebook said it will block news sharing on its platforms in Australia if the government goes ahead with a law to force it, and Alphabet's Google, to pay local media outlets for featuring their content on its platforms.
The matter is being watched closely around the world as it represents the biggest challenge so far to the way the US tech giants use news on some of the world's biggest websites.
The local arm of News Corp is a vocal supporter of the legislation. It partly blamed the tech companies for the closure of dozens of mastheads earlier this year.
Facebook and Google said they help connect media outlets with consumers, boosting their subscriptions and enabling them to charge advertisers more. Facebook said in the first five months of 2020 it sent 2.3 billion "clicks" worth about AUD 200 million (roughly Rs. 1,078 crores) to Australian news websites via articles appearing on Facebook users' pages. Google has said it would pay for content, though no major media organisation has agreed to its terms.
Australia has previously engaged in lengthy battles with major corporations. In 2012, the then centre-left government became the first in the world to prohibit cigarette companies from using designs on their packaging to attract consumers. Tobacco companies mounted legal challenges but the courts ultimately upheld the law.
© Thomson Reuters 2020
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