November 27th, 2024

When will federal gov’t stand up to tech giants?


By Lethbridge Herald Opinon on May 9, 2020.

Jerry Dias

NATIONAL PRESIDENT OF UNIFOR

Canada’s news organizations are in mortal peril, and it’s time for the federal government to take on the two marauding tech giants who are largely to blame.

Facebook and Google have pillaged the Canadian digital advertising market over the past decade. Between them, they have scooped up the vast majority of the revenue in Canada’s $6-billion-plus online advertising market – advertising that has been the chief source of revenue for Canadian media organizations.

They use content that is created by those organizations to do so, and they don’t pay a cent for it. Their actions have been one of the main causes of carnage in the Canadian media landscape.

What kind of carnage? In the last decade, more than 250 Canadian newspapers have shut down, depriving people across the country of vital information about what is happening in their communities.

The COVID-19 pandemic has made the dire situation even worse – forcing newspapers that were already struggling over the edge, the closure of 50 publications and the loss of 2,000 jobs, according the J-Source. More than 100 news outlets have been forced to make cuts, including recent cuts at the Toronto Star.

Last week, Postmedia left communities across Canada without a source of local news, shutting down most of the community papers it owns in Manitoba and gutting the media landscape in communities around Windsor as it closed 15 newspapers and laid off 80 workers.

None of this is unique to Canada. In fact, Facebook and Google are serial offenders. News organizations around the world are in crisis in the face of the same greedy duopoly.

The difference is that other countries are beginning to stand up to them.

France’s competition bureau told Google three weeks ago that it must start paying media outlets for displaying their content, and gave it three months to work out a revenue-sharing deal with French publishers.

Australia was next, telling Facebook and Alphabet Inc., Google’s parent company, they have to share advertising revenue with local media companies. The decision, on April 19, followed an investigation by Australia’s competition watchdog that proved the tech giants were instrumental in keeping Australian publishers from being paid for the content they create.

Ireland will no doubt soon be making its own move after outgoing Prime Minister Leo Varadkar last week called Facebook and Google “free riders on costs incurred by other people” and said the next Irish government was looking at ways to force them to share advertising revenues with media outlets there.

Others are acting. What is Canada waiting for?

Five years ago, Unifor started a #savelocalnews campaign. As part of that initiative, we called on the federal government to level the playing field by requiring that Google and Facebook contribute to news funding.

The situation is even worse now. The pandemic that has paralyzed the Canadian economy is taking a heavy toll on our news organizations.

Businesses are closed. Sports and entertainment events have shut down. That means they aren’t advertising, another blow to the revenue stream at those news outlets. Print publications at other media companies have gone on hiatus. Some of them will likely not return.

Canadians are starving for accurate, trustworthy information about COVID-19, and consuming more local news than ever before.

France and Australia have shown that you can take on Facebook and Google and create a sustainable future for local media organizations.

Now it’s our turn. Our federal government, like those in France and Australia, should act to give media outlets in our country a fighting chance to survive.

Unifor is Canada’s largest private-sector union.

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biff

it is amazing that companies were given the status of a person…stupid and foolish and a fraud. a prime example of the bent judiciary…at least bent when required. such a law degrades what being a person is, and allows what is most obviously a non-person to impersonate a person. and yet, unlike persons that are held to behavioural expectations and standards – and are often punished severely for serious offences – the person that is a corporation seems to be held no real responsibility. as such, they even get away from having to pay their fair share of taxes. a real person working abroad is held accountable for taxes; but not the slippery corporation person. persons are held liable for theft and for actions that cause the death(s) of other persons…not the teflon corporation person. examples of corporation persons getting off easy are so, so many. whether it be maple leaf and its killer meats, too big to fail financial entities, mining cos etc, never held anywhere close to the same standard as if a lowly real person had committed such offenses. are the masses stupid for accepting corporations as persons? – absolutely.