this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2024
52 points (91.9% liked)

Australia

3582 readers
134 users here now

A place to discuss Australia and important Australian issues.

Before you post:

If you're posting anything related to:

If you're posting Australian News (not opinion or discussion pieces) post it to Australian News

Rules

This community is run under the rules of aussie.zone. In addition to those rules:

Banner Photo

Congratulations to @[email protected] who had the most upvoted submission to our banner photo competition

Recommended and Related Communities

Be sure to check out and subscribe to our related communities on aussie.zone:

Plus other communities for sport and major cities.

https://aussie.zone/communities

Moderation

Since Kbin doesn't show Lemmy Moderators, I'll list them here. Also note that Kbin does not distinguish moderator comments.

Additionally, we have our instance admins: @[email protected] and @[email protected]

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] pendulum_ 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (7 children)

Freebooting of news article is distinctly what this is about. Content creators losing clicks, impressions, and ad revenue due to Metas methodology.

People can have a whinge "it's news corp so fugg them" but just because something hurts something you don't like doesn't make it okay.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (4 children)

No, it's not. Did you read this article? Did you read earlier articles around the time that the law this article is referencing was first being discussed & came into effect? Did you read Mike Masnick's article linked in my earlier comment?

This is about Australia's link tax, the News Media Bargaining Code. It's got everything to do with requiring Facebook and Google to pay companies for sending them traffic, and nothing whatsoever to do with freebooting.

edit: for what it's worth, this isn't just News Corp. It was most heavily pushed in its earliest stages by News Corp and other right-wing media, but the Guardian, ABC, and SBS also supported this. That doesn't make it right. It just serves to further prove how traditional media fundamentally misunderstands how technology works.

load more comments (2 replies)
load more comments (4 replies)