Meta’s decision to ban content from news companies on its Facebook and Instagram platforms in Canada in response to a new law requiring payment for the use of media-produced material is coming under heavy criticism amid wildfires affecting several cities in the country.
Major news outlets, such as the CBC network, and small local vehicles in one of the at-risk towns, Yellowknife, are unable to post information about the situation and evacuation plans.
Meta spokesman David Troya-Alvarez told CBC that audiences in affected regions can use the company’s social media channels to connect with their communities and access trusted information, including the content from official government agencies, emergencies and non-governmental organizations”.
The company also said it enabled a feature known as Safety Checkup, which allows a user to click a button to update their status and let friends and family know they’re safe. shelter from forest fires.
No news on wildfires in Canada
But if the user tries to share news from a reliable medium which is the result of verification and verification by professional journalists, the subscribers will see a message that the content is not available in the country.
To circumvent the blockade, the inhabitants find an alternative way: to share screenshots of the communication vehicles.
Even so, there are reports that some of this content is also blocked on Meta’s networks.
In the face of criticism, the Canadian government again slammed the US social media company’s stance, saying it was “deeply disappointed” in Meta’s continued “irresponsible and irrational” policy of blocking information on its platforms.
The fight is taking place because Canada has followed in the footsteps of other countries such as Australia, Italy and France, regulating the financial compensation of journalistic companies for the distribution of their content on the platforms, even if it is published by users and not by themselves.
However, Meta and Google say the Canadian law is impossible to enforce, unlike other countries, where it ended up being compromised with media organizations.
From then on, the two Big Techs concerned by the legislation (Meta and Google) decided to face the government and ban information on their platforms.
Read also | How Canada’s New Content Compensation Law Could Change the Future of Journalism
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