
CANBERRA, Australia (AP) β The author of proposed Australian laws to make Facebook and Google pay for journalism said Thursday his draft legislation will be altered to allay some of the digital giantsβ concerns, but remain fundamentally unchanged.
Australiaβs fair trade regulator Rod Sims, chair of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, said he would give his final draft of the laws to make Facebook and Google pay Australian media companies for the news content they use by early October.
Facebook has warned it might block Australian news content rather than pay for it.
Google has said the proposed laws would result in βdramatically worse Google Search and YouTube,β put free services at risk and could lead to usersβ data βbeing handed over to big news businesses.β
Sims said he is discussing the draft of his bill with the U.S. social media platforms. It could be introduced into Parliament in late October.
βGoogle has got concerns about it, some of it is that they just donβt like it, others are things that weβre happily going to engage with them on,β Sims told a webinar hosted by The Australia Institute, an independent think-tank.
βWeβll make changes to address some of those issues -- not all, but some,β Sims said.
Among the concerns is a fear that under the so-called News Media Bargaining Code, news businesses βwill be able to somehow control their algorithms,β Sims said.
βWeβll engage with them and clarify that so that thereβs no way that the news media businesses can interfere with the algorithms of Google or Facebook,β Sims said.
He said he would also clarify that the platforms would not have to disclose more data about users than they already share.
βThereβs nothing in the code that forces Google or Facebook to share the data from individuals,β Sims said.
Sims was not prepared to negotiate the βcoreβ of the code, which he described as the βbits of glue that hold the code together, that make it workable.β
These included an arbitrator to address the bargaining imbalance between the tech giants and news businesses. If a platform and a news outlet canβt reach an agreement on price, an arbitrator would be appointed to make a binding decision.
Another core aspect was a non-discrimination clause to prevent the platforms from prioritizing Australiaβs state-owned Australian Broadcasting Corp. and Special Broadcasting Service, whose news content will remain free.
Sims said he did not know whether Facebook would act on its threat and block Australian news, but he suspected that to do so would βweakenβ the platform.
Spain and France and have both failed to make Facebook and Google pay for news through copyright law. Sims said he has spoken about Australiaβs approach through fair trading laws to regulators in the United States and Europe.
βTheyβre all wrestling with the same problem,β Sims said.