Selangor Journal
A pedestrian walks past the New Zealand Parliament buildings in Wellington on June 14, 2022. — Picture by REUTERS

New Zealand to press ahead with media content pay law

SYDNEY, July 2 — New Zealand’s conservative coalition government will proceed with a bill that would make it compulsory for digital technology platforms to pay media companies for news, it said today.

The bill is being introduced as New Zealand media companies struggle against technology firms for advertising dollars, leading them to find new ways to provide news programming.

The Fair Digital News Bargaining Bill, introduced last year by the previous Labour government, will be presented in Parliament with amendments to support “our local media companies to earn revenue for the news they produce”, Communications Minister Paul Goldsmith said.

The proposed changes would align it more closely with Australia’s digital bargaining law, Goldsmith said.

That law, which took effect in Australia in March 2021, gives the government power to force internet firms such as Facebook owner Meta Platforms and Alphabet Inc’s Google to negotiate content supply deals with media outlets, if the parties fail to reach an agreement on payments.

Meta and Google did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment on the proposed law in New Zealand.

After Canada introduced a similar law in 2023, Meta blocked news content from appearing on Facebook there. Meta also said it will stop paying Australian media companies for news, and the government is considering whether to intervene.

Goldsmith said the proposed changes would give power to the communications minister to decide which digital platforms would come under the law. An independent regulator will be appointed as the bill’s authority, he said.

One of the governing coalition’s partners, the right-wing ACT New Zealand party, will not support the bill, Goldsmith said, which means it must have the support of other parties to pass.

The opposition Labour party said it would check the amendments but support the intent of the bill.

— Reuters

Top Picks

River of Life, broadband projects among highlights in Auditor-General’s Report

Less diesel confiscated after targeted subsidies activated — Armizan

International court lets seven states intervene in Gambia’s genocide case against Myanmar