Home / The Market / : Facebook befriends Australia again, after striking a deal with Canberra government on new law

: Facebook befriends Australia again, after striking a deal with Canberra government on new law

The social-media company Facebook said on Tuesday that it would restore Australian news on its platform, after striking a deal with the Canberra government on a new law that will force big technology companies to pay for news.

  • Facebook last week had blocked Australian users from sharing and using news on its site, in protest against the government’s bill.
  • Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg and Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg have since then negotiated a compromise on what Facebook called “a number of changes and guarantees” addressing the group’s concerns.
  • The changes notably involve the arbitration program that will be used if the tech groups don’t reach a deal with news publishers. The mandatory mechanism will now only be triggered after a two-month mediation period. 
  • Tech giant Google GOOGL, -1.48% has already signed a number of deals to pay for news on its own platform, including a landmark global agreement with News Corp NWSA, -0.43% that includes the company’s Australian newspapers. (News Corp owns MarketWatch, the publisher of this report.)
  • Facebook FB, +1.55% “has refriended Australia,” and it and Google have sought a “workable” code because “they know that the eyes of the world” are on the country, Frydenberg said on Tuesday.

The outlook: The agreement with the Australian government provides Facebook with a face-saving exit out of a tricky public relations situation, after the backlash triggered last week by its Australian boycott. The question now is whether the Australian law will serve as a model for other countries or regions of the world.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

MarketWatch.com – Top Stories

About

Check Also

: ‘We shouldn’t be complacent’: Suicide deaths fell during the 2020 pandemic — but what caused the decline?

Preliminary estimates suggest that suicide deaths declined amid the unprecedented mental-health and economic challenges last …