Meta's Canadian news ban 'an assault on local journalism,' says Nunavut newspaper publisher
CBC
Nunavut's main newspaper says Meta's decision to remove Canadian content from its platforms will have a significant impact in the territory.
Last week, the social media giant announced it was ending news availability on its platforms in Canada. The company said the move means links posted by Canadian news outlets would no longer be seen by people in Canada. There is no change to international users, according to Meta.
The move was in response to the federal government's passing of Bill C-18 in June, which requires big tech giants like Google and Meta to pay media outlets for news content they share or otherwise repurpose on their platforms.
Nunatsiaq News publisher Michael Roberts said there was a "fair amount of exposure" from Facebook, driving between 15 to 20 per cent of the traffic on the newspaper's website.
"It definitely will have an impact. However, it's also up to our readers in the community to support us during this, really, frontal assault on local journalism," Roberts said. He hopes their readers seek out the newspaper's content through other avenues.
"By doing that, [our readers] will lessen the impact this has on our level of journalism and our business model."
Roberts said advertising revenue funds 95 per cent of Nunatsiaq News, which is primarily based on web traffic.
But he said over the years, advertising dollars have been siphoned away by social media companies like Meta.
"What happens is organizations like businesses, the government of Nunavut, the government of Canada, have gradually been transferring their advertising dollars to social media, which now takes 80 per cent of the available dollars that are in the marketplace," Roberts said.
"So that starves local journalism and leads to layoffs and closures of newspapers. In the North, you can see newspapers getting into trouble and being bought out by chains instead of staying independent. It's definitely a crisis situation."
Northern News Service Limited — which operates Nunavut News and Kivalliq News — did not respond to CBC's request for an interview, nor did APTN.
Through a spokesperson, CBC North declined an interview request for this story, and would not provide statistics on how Facebook drove traffic to its website. Still-accessible public posts from CBC Nunavut's Facebook page show 1,400 people on average viewed the page's Igalaaq livestream over the last eight episodes.
On the merits of Bill C-18, Roberts found the bill was "fine as it stands," and "good enough," even though it may not be perfect, he said.
"Obviously it's had a severe reaction from Meta in particular. But as we saw in Australia, this may largely be a negotiating tactic," Roberts said.