Cyprus Mail
BusinessInternationalSocial Media

New Zealand plans law to require Facebook, Google to pay for news

meta facebook google

The New Zealand government said it will introduce a law that will require big online digital companies such as Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) Google and Meta Platforms Inc (META.O) to pay New Zealand media companies for the local news content that appears on their feeds.

Minister of Broadcasting Willie Jackson said in a statement on Sunday that the legislation will be modelled on similar laws in Australia and Canada and he hoped it would act as an incentive for the digital platforms to reach deals with local news outlets.

“New Zealand news media, particularly small regional and community newspapers, are struggling to remain financially viable as more advertising moves online,” Jackson said. “It is critical that those benefiting from their news content actually pay for it.”

The new legislation will go to a vote in parliament where the governing Labour Party’s majority is expected to pass it.

Australia introduced a law in 2021 that gave the government power to make internet companies negotiate content supply deals with media outlets. A review released by the Australian government last week found it largely worked.

Follow the Cyprus Mail on Google News

Related Posts

Minister says Chevron’s position on EEZ synergies is positive

Tom Cleaver

One sixth of Cypriot electricity consumption from renewable sources

Tom Cleaver

Cyprus economic climate improves in November 2023

Kyriacos Nicolaou

Three Cryptos to keep an eye on in 2023: Meme Moguls, BNB, and Toncoin

CM Guest Columnist

Nicosia property sales hit €164.9 million in third quarter — capital sees most apartment sales in Cyprus

Kyriacos Nicolaou

BoE’s Bailey vows to do ‘what it takes’ to cut inflation to 2 per cent

Reuters News Service