Canadian media outlets challenge the government to save the industry with new measures to rein in big tech
Canadian news media organizations, which say they are being bled dry by tech companies like Google and Facebook, have challenged the government to follow Australia's lead and implement strong new measures to save the industry.
On Thursday, News Media Canada, a lobby group representing major print and digital publishers including Torstar, issued a report requesting that the federal government allow them to band together to bargain collectively with the tech giants, impose a code of conduct on web monopolies," and enforce that code with large financial penalties.
This model would help the struggling industry take on the monopolistic practices" of the American tech giants and level the playing field at no cost to taxpayers and without the need for new user fees or subsidies, the organization says.
Media companies, with the approval of government, would form a collective bargaining unit to negotiate compensation for the use of their content and intellectual property by Google and Facebook, which currently collect around 80 per cent of digital advertising revenues in Canada, according to the organization.
Currently, media outlets are forced to play by their rules, and they can pay us whatever they feel like. We want to end a monopolistic abuse of power," said Jamie Irving, vice-president of Brunswick News Publishing and chair of News Media Canada's working group.
Canadian anticompetition law currently prohibits media outlets from forming a negotiating bloc, so legislative changes would be needed for them to collectively negotiate with the tech giants.
Irving oversaw the Levelling the Digital Playing Field" report released Thursday, which reviewed how various countries have tried to address challenges posed by the dominance of web giants in digital advertising.
The Australia model was clearly the best model for Canada," Irving said. Our two countries are similar in many ways."
In addition to allowing the country's news media to form a collective bargaining unit, Australia is working on a legally binding code of conduct to ensure that tech companies don't try to expand their market domination and anti-competitive prices. Those that violate the rules would be subject to fines in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The enforcement would have teeth," Irving said.
Advocates have long argued that Canadian publishing laws - mainly written for the predigital era - are antiquated.
News Media Canada represents publications that reach more than 90 per cent of the news media readership in Canada through daily, regional, community and ethnocultural news publications.
Its membership includes Torstar, which publishes the Toronto Star, Glacier Media, Black Press, Postmedia, the Globe and Mail, La Presse, Quebecor and Brunswick News.
Irving says that he hopes that the proposal will achieve broad bipartisan support in Ottawa.
Last month, the federal throne speech announced that Canada will pass a new law compelling companies like Facebook and Google to pay for the stories, music and videos they take from other sources and post online.
Web giants are taking Canadians' money while imposing their own priorities. Things must change and will change," said the speech read by Governor General Julie Payette.
The government will act to ensure their revenue is shared more fairly with our creators and media, and will also require them to contribute to the creation, production and distribution of our stories, onscreen, in lyrics, in music and in writing."
Clarification - Oct. 22, 2020: This article was edited from a previous version to make clear that Google and Facebook control 80 per cent of digital ad revenues in Canada, according to the report.
With files from Moira Welsh and Alex Boutillier
Joanna Chiu is a Vancouver-based reporter covering both Canada-China relations and current affairs on the West Coast for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @joannachiu