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Ken Schultz's avatar

I have for a long time been opposed to the idea that Google et al should pay newspapers ANY money.

Firstly, I simply thought that the idea that Google et al would fork over dollars and not find a way to later hit me (and everyone on the internet, for that matter) in a way that allows recovery and more was simply naive.

Second, if I wanted to prop up, say, the Toronto Star then I can buy a subscription to that publication. If I don't want a subscription then why should I "participate" in funding it?

Third, and very importantly to me, I really didn't see how Google et al benefited from the passthrough of clicks more than the particular newspaper. That, of course, is the point of Peter Menzies column herein. Really, the newspapers should be sending money to Google et al rather than the other way around.

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Tony F.'s avatar

The government is trying to solve the wrong problem. They are trying to fix the now broken business model on the behalf of media companies. That's not the public's problem.

The public's problem is that democracy requires universal access to accurate information to help us gauge how well (or not well) government is fulfilling their mandate. News does more than that -- it entertains, supports other businesses -- but those can be delivered by other means.

The problem with social media is that it provides all kinds of information (and disinformation) without an easy means to determine quality (at least not built into the platform). Worse, it's designed only to keep you on the platform, so its algorithms with actively push you to low quality information if you indicate any interest in it at all (even hovering over something clickbaity). That creates an "idea marketplace" that's easily manipulated, where people don't have access to a similar set of basic information (if social is their only source) and that's difficult to trust.

We regulate information in financial markets, creating penalties for those who attempt to manipulate the market. We also mandate that really important information gets shared with everyone at the same time. An open information marketplace requires similar oversight.

I would submit that government regulation should focus on two things.

First there should be legal penalties for attempting to use social platform to sway public opinion in a non-transparent manner. If you used bot farms or networks of related sites to make a piece of content seem way more popular than it is -- the equivalent of talking up a stock as an analyst that you hold interest in -- there should be a legal penalty. Right now, we are relying on tech firms' terms of service to regulate this, but their primary interest is profit and the damage exists in the public sphere. Now, realistically, this will be hard to police. But let's at least acknowledge that defrauding the public in this manner is undesirable!

That said -- if you are transparent; if you are an advocacy group and you work with other aligned with your cause -- have at it. The goal here isn't to stifle legitimate discourse. It's to squash illegitimate (and fraudulant) tactics to hack the algorithm and get access to a lot of eyeballs.

Second: focus the regulation on the algorithm. Social media companies only care about engagement and ad revenue. We need to make the automated decisions on what content they serve up to people transparent. Ideally, the criteria should NOT be the platform's choice. I as a user should be able to determine the criteria behind the content served to me. And, businesses serving content (eg monitizing it) should be held accountable for the content they serve up. That doesn't mean censoring, but it does mean a higher level of accountability at to who these actors are, where they are, and what their business model is. A bunch of sites in Russia all sharing political content for profit in Canada should not be able to hide behind social media anonymity.

Now, this is all new ground and and I think getting this regulation right will take time. But let's focus on 'public good' -- defined here by a trustworthy information ecosystem that still preserves freedom of expression -- and not on propping up specific sectors!

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