News Corp leads charge against tech giants in Australia probe

AFP  |  Sydney 

Rupert Murdoch's Corporation accused and of "anti-competitive practices" in one of dozens of submissions to a probe of the released today by Australia's competition watchdog.

Corp, the country's group, its main competitor Fairfax and commercial broadcasters led the charge in arguing that and Google's dominance of significantly undermined the industry.

"A number of digital platforms possess substantial market power and are engaging in anti-competitive practices that prevent publishers such as from competing on the merits," the company said in a 144-page submission.

"These practices have the potential to profoundly damage the creation, distribution and consumption of news and journalism in " Murdoch and other executives from the company, which also owns and of London, have long led calls for and to "level the playing field" and pay news companies for their content.

But The Australian newspaper said the ACCC submission, by alleging market abuses by the two companies, "represents a dramatic escalation of hostilities".

The group stopped short of demanding regulation of Facebook and Google, saying "current laws may be sufficient to deal with our concerns".

"However, it may also be the case that some further legislative, regulatory and/or policy intervention or changes are required." Fairfax complained that its main mastheads had seen their from Aus$800 million (US$600 million) in 1999 to just Aus$225 million (US$169m) in 2017 as and Facebook gobbled up dollars. As a result, the group has shed hundreds of jobs.

But it also stopped short of demanding new regulations, saying this should be "a last resort", and argued instead for the digital platforms to work collaboratively on solutions for the news

Distancing itself from News Corp, Fairfax also opposed making platforms pay for news content, saying this would be "impractical" and post risks for editorial independence.

Australia's main television broadcasters -- Seven, Nine and Ten -- demanded some combination of revenue sharing and tighter regulation of the tech companies'

"The ACCC must intervene to ensure that the competition for is occurring in a fair and effective manner," said the Ten Network, recently purchased by US broadcaster

In its own submission to the ACCC made public last month, Facebook opposed calls for tighter regulation, saying the rapidly changing digital landscape made the platforms "a challenging subject for regulatory intervention".

"Consumers often have the most to gain from market disruptions caused by technological change and the most to lose from interventions that are designed to protect particular business models from the effects of those changes," it said.

Google added in its submission that "changes in consumer and marketing behaviour have profound implications for traditional news business models. But they do not mean the death of journalism." The competition commission is expected to publish a preliminary report in December, and a final report next year.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, May 03 2018. 12:50 IST