According to Nick Odell <
[email protected]>:
There are suggestions that the current stand-off between social media >companies and the Canadian government are contributing to confusion >surrounding evacuations from wildfire areas because many members of
the public have forgotten how to get news directly from source.
Sigh. People have forgotten how to turn on the radio?
Australia demanded fair payments for the news - but were forced to
back down.
France demanded fair payments for the news - and won.
Not really. Ten years ago Google did a one-time Digital Innovation
Fund, but there was and is no link tax.
What will happen in Canada and what should be the message for the rest
of the world?
If the government had any sense they'd stop listening to the whinging
from the big papers and start listening to Michael Geist. It is
certainly true that newspaper ad revenues have collapsed, but Google
and Facebook didn't cause it (blame Craigslist if you want) and
shaking them down won't fix it. It doubly won't fix it because the
papers that need the money are small local ones and the link tax money
would mostly go to big rich ones.
--
Regards,
John Levine,
[email protected], Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail.
https://jl.ly
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