The news lobby has no apparent qualms that this bill will create a media industry dependent upon the good graces of the two most imposing powers in the lives of citizens these days: Big Tech and Big Government. They claim, unconvincingly, that Facebook and Google have been “stealing” their journalism and must pay them—through C-18—hundreds of millions in annual compensation.
So how did we get from those proudly profitable and ruggedly independent days to an industry begging the government for corporate welfare? Prior to the worldwide web, 30-40 percent of major dailies’ revenue came from classified advertising. Before Kijiji, society’s cavalcade of births, deaths, marriages, and engagements passed through those pages, along with Help Wanted ads, plumbing, carpentry, and other services.
Newspapers had no response. Nor did they when car dealers, real estate agents, grocery stores, and others discovered they could sell directly to customers through their websites. Concurrently, Google and others developed search engines that assumed the role of matchmaker between buyers and sellers and then along came Facebook where people could announce their OMG I said Yes! engagements, the births of their children, and the deaths of their parents.
The more eyeballs moved online, the more advertising followed and the more jobs disappeared in newsrooms. Almost 500 Canadian newspapers (many of them weeklies) have died. On the bright side, more than 200 online news platforms have started up. But they lack lobbyists, which means it is the aging dailies that remain the focus of the political class.
The Canadian government’s enthusiasm for implementing something similar remains undiminished. So much so that, after newspapers did all the legwork, broadcasters waded in to influence the structure of Bill C-18. As a result, according to the Parliamentary Budget Officer, they will take home $249 million of the $329 million he estimates C-18 will generate annually for news providers from the web giants. The two largest beneficiaries will likely be the CBC and Bell Media, leaving a mere $80 million for legacy newspapers bleeding millions.
In February, Google began a widely publicized assessment of what the impact might be if it de-indexed Canadian news websites. The touch was relatively light, using its options through a series of “experiments” that denied 4 percent of its search engine users access to Canadian news results.
And then last month, to the news lobby’s dismay, Facebook announced it would stop (to use the publishers’ terminology) “stealing” and will no longer permit links to news stories once Bill C-18 passes. At this point—and with numerous non-partisan experts declaring C-18 an utter disaster—it appears that the best this chaotic legislation can offer is palliative care for geriatric organizations incapable of adapting to change.