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MALTATODAY 14 March 2021

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16 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 14 MARCH 2021 NEWS The European Parliament has declared the EU an 'LGBTIQ Freedom Zone' FIND OUT MORE www.maltatoday.com.mt/news/ewropej NICOLE MEILAK THE pressure is on worldwide to start regulating tech giants, as Australia passed a controversial media bargaining code that will require social media platforms to pay for news content on their site. However, Labour MEP Alex Agius Saliba revealed to MaltaToday that the Europe- an Parliament remains heavily divided on the issue, with EU lawmakers risking to miss a golden opportunity to reform the European system if the discussion ends up derailed due to developments in Australia. Two pieces of legislation for part of Eu- rope's digital strategy are the Digital Ser- vices Act (DSA) and the Digital Markets Act (DMA), which aim to establish a level playing field within the European Single Digital Market. More concretely, the DSA will oblige large platforms to inform their users, us- ing simple language, of the parameters by which algorithms recommend content or online adverising to its users. Large plat- forms in this case refers to sites reaching over 10% of the EU's population, or 45 million European users. The DMA is more concerned with the monopolistic tendencies of big tech plat- forms, whereby they act as digital gate- keepers to the single market. The legis- lation will grant the EU power to impose sanctions for non-compliance, including fines reaching up to 10% of the website's worldwide turnover. "Big tech has become an unavoidable trading partner for news publishers, and the issue needs to be addressed and dis- cussed at length, but the EU shouldn't risk reigniting the copyright issue, which was somewhat settled through the introduc- tion of the controversial Copyright Direc- tive," Agius Saliba said. Article 15 of the directive imposes a so- called "link tax" on content aggregators, automatically granting news publishers the right to negotiate a licence with aggre- gators like Google, with individual jour- nalists entitled to a share of the money their publication receives from the licens- ing agreement negotiated. This directive has already beared fruit in some Member states. Last month, an agreement was reached between Google France and the French publishing col- lective Alliance de la Presse d'Informa- tion Generale, whereby Google will start paying French publishers for content published to the search engine's News Showcase – a press publication licensing program not yet available in Malta. The directive hasn't yet been transposed across every Member State. Agius Saliba argues that the EU would be better off waiting to see how this directive will be transposed across the bloc, and then look- ing into a wider piece of legislation that will more rigorously regulate tech giants. "Through the DSA and DMA we take back some control in the media ecosys- tem, but if we try to solve copyright issues already tackled in another directive under these acts, we risk opening a pandora's box and derailing the discussion," he said. Agius Saliba mentioned that he is in fa- vour of arbitration processes to help strike a fair balance between the media industry and tech companies, although not neces- sarily by copying the arbitration system adopted in Australia. Advertising serves as the bulwark of any mediahouse's profit, but companies are shifting towards digital advertisement spaces, often on Facebook and Google, to the extent that in 2015 the two companies accounted for 75% of all new online ad spending. This fosters a skewed negotiat- ing environment whereby tech companies have the upper hand. All this has implications for the rise of sensationalist news content. Agius Saliba warned that a digital business model fo- cused on the number of clicks an article attracts will only serve to promote sensa- tionalist content. "We could kill serious media and investigative journalism while directly, or indirectly promoting sensa- tionalist content," he said. An added argument to this is that Face- book and Google generate signifiant ad revenue, but rely on the content of others to drive engagement. A survey commissioned by Alex Agi- us Saliba and the S&D group found that nearly 60% of Maltese social media users used online platforms to check news and remain up-to-date on current or personal affairs. More specifically, users aged over 25 as well as users with a secondary lev- el of education claimed that this was the main reason for which they use social me- dia. So while news and current affairs drives significant engagement on social media, little is gained in return. But this doesn't mean that Malta should tackle the issue alone. As Agius Saliba rightly pointed out, if Facebook managed to bully Australia into amending their in- itial proposed legislation, they could do the same if not worse with any attempts in Malta. "We can't stand up to these big tech gi- ants alone. It would be much more feasi- ble for us to carry out reform and stand our ground at EU level. We're a big bloc, and the strength of our union is that we can join forces and negotiate collectively." MEPs split on regulation of tech giants "We can't stand up to these big tech giants alone. It would be much more feasible for us to carry out reform and stand our ground at EU level. We're a big bloc, and the strength of our union is that we can join forces and negotiate collectively." Labour MEP Alex Agius Saliba

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