Front Burner

Google, Meta to block news in Canada

The Liberal government said their plan to make web giants pay for news links would help news media, and the Canadians who rely on it. But now Google and Meta say they’ll block news in this country. Did the plan backfire?
A screen with a blue square with a white letter f on it next to a white square with  multicolour letter G on it.
This file photo taken on October 1, 2019, shows the logos of mobile apps Facebook and Google displayed on a tablet in Lille, France. - From the Arab Spring to bloodletting in Syria, from Obama to Trump, from terror in the streets of Paris to Brexit, the 2010s began with hope for a more equitable world, and end with a slide towards nationalistic populism. (Denis Charlet/AFP/Getty Images)

It's a Canadian media power play unlike any other: Alphabet and Meta are fighting back against the Canadian government's Bill C-18. And caught in the middle is the news media. 

The Online News Act – was supposed to make tech giants pay for posting news stories to their platforms. 

Now Google and Meta say they aren't going to pay. Instead — they'll remove Canadian news from their sites and apps. It's a move that will make it more difficult for Canadians to access news. And may very well plummet news companies further into the red.

This all comes as news companies are cutting back, looking at mergers, trying to get out of obligations of providing local news to Canadians. Chris Waddell joins Tamara Khandaker to sort through this. He's a former professor at  the School of Journalism and Communication at Carleton University. He's also the publisher at J-Source, a website dedicated to the Canadian media industry.