Bill C-18 would require tech giants to pay Canadian media companies for linking to or otherwise repurposing their content online.
But Gingras said those concerns have not been considered and that recent amendments to the bill have made things worse in some cases.
Sen. Paula Simons called Gingras’s comments “rather conciliatory,” in light of the test it ran earlier this year.
Critics called that a bully tactic at the time, and the Canadian Association of Broadcasters said it’s proof that global digital giants did not intend to play fair.
Gingras said the company hasn’t made a final decision on whether it will limit journalism links for Canadian users going forward. When Sen. Donna Dasko asked what the company will do if the bill passes in its current form, he said he does not have certainty.
Simons also took issue with Google’s concern that the bill does not create journalistic standards, and questioned whether the company wanted leeway to govern that itself or if it wanted the government to do so.
Gingras said he doesn’t think it’s up to the government, “or anyone, to decide exactly what journalism is.”
The Senate communications committee also heard from representatives for Meta, the company that owns Facebook and Instagram, which made the case that news is a tiny fraction of its business.
The company estimates that people clicked on publishers’ links more than 1.9 billion times in the last year from Facebook feeds, which it says is worth an estimated $230 million.
“It is publishers that benefit from being on our platforms, not the reverse,” said Rachel Curran, Meta Canada’s head of public policy.
She said posts linking to news articles are less than three percent of what people see in their Facebook feeds, and more than 90 percent of views on news publishers’ articles are on links posted by the publishers themselves.
“We don’t lose any revenue, or very little revenue, if news content is substituted by something else,” she said.
He also said advertisers are not particularly interested in news searches, and he, too, argued the company is willing to do more to support news than it earns.
“The amount of revenue that we earn directly from news on our products is even less than that.”