Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones and Communications Minister Michelle Rowland are leading the government’s attempts to rein in big tech.Credit:Ben Symons
Those outlets,includingThe Daily Aus andBroadsheet,worry Meta will follow through on a threat,first reported by this masthead,to block all news content from Facebook and Instagram,crippling platforms reliant on social media for clicks.
The fear of news-free social media feeds has opened up the possibility that Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones,who is leading Labor’s negotiations with Meta,will opt against “designating” Meta under the news media bargaining code to avoid thecompany ditching news in Australia. Under legislation brought in by the Coalition in 2021,the minister can “designate” a digital platform to negotiate with news media companies if it refuses to do so of its own accord.
A proposed levy paid by Meta and other tech giants to fund local journalism has been discussed in meetings between Jones and bosses from News Corp,Nine and other companies,according to high-level sources who asked for anonymity to divulge the private talks. Nine owns this masthead.
A levy would represent a big step-up in the Albanese government’s widening actions against big tech,involving clampdowns onmisinformation,scams,child abuse material,addictivealgorithms and copyright.
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Hinting at policies that would go above and beyond the Coalition’s world-leading code,Jones said on Wednesday:“The[code] was a perfectly sensible and effective tool back in 2021 to deal with the circumstances in 2021. Those circumstances have changed significantly.”
The government has not discussed any new revenue measures in public as it has facedpressure from the Coalition to designate Meta.