Meta threatens to block news stories in California over new bill
Meta will remove all news links from Facebook and Instagram in California if state legislators pass a bill that would tax the tech platform's advertising profits, a company spokesperson threatened on Wednesday.
The California Journalism Preservation Act hopes to tax the advertising profits companies like Meta or Google make from distributing news content. If passed, 70% of the tax revenue, dubbed a "usage fee," would be funneled back into newsrooms throughout California. The bill is intended "to seek compensation for publishers based on the value they create for technology platforms," The Wall Street Journal explained. "There is no cap on the size of publishers who can join the effort."
If the bill is signed into law, Meta "will be forced to remove news from Facebook and Instagram, rather than pay into a slush fund that primarily benefits big, out-of-state media companies under the guise of aiding California publishers," Andy Stone, a spokesman for the company, tweeted on Wednesday.
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Danielle Coffey, executive vice president of the News Media Alliance, knocked Meta for threatening to pull stories in the state, noting that "the ailing news industry would benefit from having tech platforms pay their fair share," NPR summarized. "Meta's threat to take down news is undemocratic and unbecoming. We have seen [this] in their playbook before," Coffey said in a statement.
The tech giant's history suggests this is "not an empty threat," Axios wrote. In 2021, Meta pulled news content from Facebook in Australia in response to a similar law that forced platforms to pay publishers for news content. The ban was later reversed after the government changed the terms of the law. "News traffic in Australia plummeted in response to the short-term ban," Axios added.
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Theara Coleman has worked as a staff writer at The Week since September 2022. She frequently writes about technology, education, literature and general news. She was previously a contributing writer and assistant editor at Honeysuckle Magazine, where she covered racial politics and cannabis industry news.
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