
I spoke with execs on both sides of this issue on Wednesday, and they
 are all in agreement about that: In the words of one source, regulators
 in other countries "all want to cut and paste" Australia's proposed 
News Media Bargaining Code.
"We are expecting a big push in the 
US in the new Congress," David Chavern, the head of a trade group for 
newspapers, tweeted Wednesday.
So what is this all about? If you 
haven't been following along, here's the story in a few sentences: Large
 publishers, led by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, have been pushing to get
 paid by Google and Facebook, since the tech platforms profit by running
 ads alongside links to news content. The tech companies have been 
objecting, saying this payment plan would break how the web works, but 
they've come up with alternatives to compensate some news producers. 
Some
 of their allies have likened it to a shakedown. The NYT's Damien Cave 
has a recap from Sydney here. Now to Wednesday's developments:
Kerry
 Flynn writes: "What is Facebook without news? People and publishers in 
Australia are now finding out. What was once Facebook leadership's 
suggested outcome in response to Australia's bargaining code became a 
reality on Wednesday. When users in Australia tried to post news 
article, a message popped up that reads, "This post can't be shared." 
The same went for people all around the world when they tried to post 
news from Australian publishers. 
And all news publisher pages in
 Australia are now empty. So are other news-adjacent pages that seem to 
have been swept up in this action by mistake.
In a thread on 
Twitter -- a platform still permissible for sharing news in Australia 
and elsewhere -- Facebook exec Campbell Brown wrote, "Our goal was to 
find resolution that strengthened collaboration with publishers, but the
 legislation fails to recognize fundamental relationship between us 
& news organizations."
This legislation is not yet law. But 
FB is taking action on its own terms. Its argument is that publishers 
choose to post news and make money from doing so. 
In a blog 
post, FB's William Easton suggested that "the value exchange between 
Facebook and publishers runs in favor of the publishers." Even so, 
Facebook had been starting to pay some publishers for their content 
through Facebook News. Brown and Easton said in their separate blog 
posts that Facebook had been planning to launch that product in 
Australia. But now they're focused on other countries.
>> 
According to the Australian Financial Review, "Nine and News Corp were 
both on the cusp of inking agreements with the Silicon Valley giant, 
according to industry sources. But in this game of global brinkmanship 
between a sovereign government and gigantic corporation, Facebook is 
desperate to avoid setting a precedent for other countries to plunder 
its rich revenues..."
Facebook's
 drastic action was in stark contrast to an earlier announcement on 
Wednesday from Google. Instead of following through on its threat to 
shut down search in the country, Google has been cozying up with 
Australian publishers, including Murdoch. News Corp and Google announced
 a three-year deal in which the tech giant will pay to license content 
from Murdoch's brands in Australia and other countries. This means that 
News Corp is participating in Google's News Showcase, a new product 
where publishers curate content, and partnering on developing a 
subscription platform, sharing ad revenue and investing in audio and 
video journalism. This way, Google technically isn't paying for links, 
it's paying for something separate.
>> Earlier this week, 
Australia's Seven West Media and Nine Entertainment signed licensing 
deals with Google for News Showcase...
>> Note what News 
Corp chief Robert Thomson said earlier this month: "New terms of trade 
will be introduced" in Australia "but that debate now extends across the
 globe. There is not a single serious digital regulator anywhere in the 
world who is not examining the opacity of algorithms, the integrity of 
personal data, the social value of professional journalism, and the 
dysfunctional digital ad market..."
--
 ABC Managing Editor David Anderson's statement: "We will continue our 
discussions with Facebook today following this development..."
--
 Casey Newton tweeted: "I expect this will be temporary. In the 
meantime, though, there are worse things than Australians getting their 
news from somewhere other than Facebook." In his newsletter, he argued 
that the Google/News Corp deal is bad for journalism...
-- Emily 
Bell tweeted: Facebook is "not a consistently pro-democratic company, 
and it is not an accountability platform. It also does not fundamentally
 care about or respect journalism. It is an advertising company..."
--
 Mike Isaac wrote: "I am fascinated to see what sort of information — 
misinformation? — fills the void in countries that will no longer allow 
news publisher link sharing..."
Donie
 O'Sullivan writes: "Specifics of this case aside.... this is a reminder
 of the huge role Facebook plays in our lives and in our discourse. From
 staying in touch with friends, to where we get news, to where the seeds
 of an insurrection can be sowed. Given its size, influence, and 
importance, we are going to see the company at the center of more and 
more existential and fundamental debates about how we communicate and 
how we are informed and misinformed in the 21st century..."