Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Online News Act funding capped for private broadcasters, CBC: regulations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2023 11:00 AM
  • Online News Act funding capped for private broadcasters, CBC: regulations

Final regulations for the Online News Act show the amount of funding private broadcasters will get through the government's $100-million deal with Google will be limited, with an even lower cap for the CBC.

The regulations released on Friday say CBC/Radio-Canada will get no more than a $7-million share of the annual fund, while another $30 million at most will be reserved for other broadcasters.

The rest of the money is earmarked for other qualifying news outlets, such as newspapers and digital platforms.

For outlets to qualify for the money, their content must be available on Google Search, so it's likely campus radio stations will be excluded from the funding under the deal.

Google agreed last month to contribute $100 million a year, indexed to inflation, to Canadian news publishers, in a deal that had the Liberal government bending to the tech giant's demands after it threatened to remove news links from its search engine.

As a result, Google will be exempt from the legislation, which compels tech companies to enter into compensation agreements with news publishers for linking to their content, if it generates revenue for those digital giants.

Meta has responded to the new policy by ending access to news for Canadian users of Instagram and Facebook.

The only companies big enough to fall under criteria set out under the law are Google and Meta.

Google will instead enter into a single collective bargaining group that will serve as a media fund.

Once the law comes into effect next Tuesday, Google will have to launch an open call in which eligible news businesses have 60 days to request a slice of the $100-million pie.

The money will be distributed proportionately to how many full time-journalists companies employ.

In order for news businesses to be eligible, they must have at least two full-time employees.

Small print and digital outlets can expect to receive about $17,000 per journalist that they employ, an official with the Canadian Heritage Department said Friday in a technical briefing for journalists.

The briefing was provided on the condition that officials not be named.

Google still sees the Online News Act as "fundamentally flawed," but is pleased it was able to find "a viable path to exemption in the final regulations," a spokesperson for the company said.

"Fortunately, this means we will be able to continue sending valuable traffic to Canadian publishers and Canadians will be able to continue enjoying the Google products they know and love while we work through the exemption process," the spokesperson said in a statement Friday.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Is hurricane Lee headed for Canada? The 'spaghetti models' can be misleading: expert

Is hurricane Lee headed for Canada? The 'spaghetti models' can be misleading: expert
For residents of Canada's East Coast, some of the latest images showing the potential path northward for a rapidly intensifying hurricane Lee are disturbing. By combining multiple computer-generated forecasts, meteorologists have produced maps of the western Atlantic Ocean that suggest the powerful storm could slam into the Maritimes late next week.

Is hurricane Lee headed for Canada? The 'spaghetti models' can be misleading: expert

More ads coming as Conservatives plot path to make Poilievre the next prime minister

More ads coming as Conservatives plot path to make Poilievre the next prime minister
More than 2,000 Conservatives are in Quebec City for the party's convention, and will hear directly from Poilievre himself when he takes the stage Friday night. The mood at the convention is buoyant, following a number of polls that show the party with a considerable lead over the governing Liberals.

More ads coming as Conservatives plot path to make Poilievre the next prime minister

Trudeau to have pull-aside with Modi on sidelines of G20

Trudeau to have pull-aside with Modi on sidelines of G20
The Canadian delegation sought a meeting with Modi during the annual meeting of the world's largest economies, but Sunday's 10-minute meeting wasn't confirmed until after Trudeau landed Friday in New Delhi. India, now the world's most populous country, is featured prominently in the Indo-Pacific, a region Canada is seeking to expand its trade reach and reduce the influence of China.  

Trudeau to have pull-aside with Modi on sidelines of G20

Boat fire injures one, sends plume of smoke over Vancouver's False Creek

Boat fire injures one, sends plume of smoke over Vancouver's False Creek
Fire has damaged a roughly 10 metre pleasure craft, one of the many small boats that moor long-term in Vancouver's False Creek. Vancouver Fire and Rescue asst. chief Ken Gemmill says a man may have been cooking when the fire broke out about 5:30 p.m., Thursday, in the waters off David Lam Park in Yaletown.

Boat fire injures one, sends plume of smoke over Vancouver's False Creek

Motorcyclist badly hurt

Motorcyclist badly hurt
Shortly after 4 p.m. on September 1, Richmond RCMP, responded to the area of Blundell Road near Minoru Boulevard after reports of a downed motorcyclist. The motorcycle operator, a 63-year old male from Richmond was located some distance away from his blue Honda. He received emergency care at the scene and was transported to hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Motorcyclist badly hurt

Vancouver manslaughter conviction

Vancouver manslaughter conviction
Jeff Arnie Lincoln, 41, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced on August 30th, following a Vancouver Police investigation that began more than two years earlier, when Lincoln assaulted 60-year-old Gilles Hebert in Grandview Park, near Commercial Drive and Charles Street. Hebert was taken to hospital and later died from his injuries.  

Vancouver manslaughter conviction