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Canada’s Trudeau pans Google and Meta for ‘bullying’ to stop bill

The technology companies Alphabet and Meta are using “bullying tactics” against a Canadian push aimed at ensuring financial support for news publishers, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Wednesday.The proposed legislation is designed to compel internet giants like the Alphabet-owned Google and Meta’s Facebook to negotiate commercial deals with news outlets and pay publishers for their content.
The United States-based technology companies say proposals in the bill, dubbed the Online News Act, are unsustainable for their businesses.Google and Facebook have run tests this year to limit some users from viewing or sharing news content in Canada as a potential response if the legislation is passed into law in its current form.
“The fact that these internet giants would rather cut off Canadians’ access to local news than pay their fair share is a real problem, and now they’re resorting to bullying tactics to try and get their way,” Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa. “It’s not going to work.”

The bill, introduced in April 2022, is similar to a ground-breaking law passed in Australia in 2021.Google said, however, the rules in Canada’s bill are more stringent than those enacted in Australia and Europe. It has proposed amendments “to align with international norms” and address the company’s concerns.“We’ve come to the table with reasonable and pragmatic solutions that would make the bill work the way it’s intended to and increase our investments in the Canadian news ecosystem,” said Google spokesperson Shay Purdy, reacting to Trudeau’s remarks.The bill “has some serious problems that make it unworkable for our products and services”, Purdy added.The legislation passed Canada’s House of Commons in December and is in the unelected upper chamber of the parliament, which rarely blocks legislation cleared by the lower house.

UCU Strike Action At The End Of November

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Democrats and Republicans almost reached meaningful agreements. Then politics got in the way.

For a brief window of time on Capitol Hill, it appeared that Republicans and Democrats had done the unthinkable: come to agreements on thorny policy issues with real effects for Americans. The mirage barely lasted a day.After one of Congress’s least productive years in modern history, naked political considerations are scuttling bipartisan deals. While legislative slow-walking isn’t uncommon in election years, what’s unusual is the lawmakers seem to be openly admitting it.“It depends on one’s [political] tribe which narrative one subscribes to,” Indiana Republican Senator Todd Young said of voters trying to decipher what their lawmakers are doing. “But for those who don’t affiliate with either tribe, I think they think this looks chaotic and puzzling. And they’re correct on both counts.”No one declared either deal perfect, with the left objecting to some things in each and liking others, and same for the right. But both offered a classic compromise that would have advanced the ball, however imperfectly, on a number of fronts with significance for Americans, including tax credits for parents of children, national security aid for war-torn allies, efforts to address the migrant situation at the border, and pro-business measures. And both appeared to be slipping out of reach.

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Rugby Great Starts Brighton Half

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The battle is on for Nikki Haley’s supporters

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