Google confirms it’s only blocking Canadian news orgs as defined under the Online News Act and would not, for example, block the New York Times or Fox News.

As @mgeist notes:

“The effects will be devastating for Canadian media, who will disappear. In their place will be foreign outlets and lower-quality outlets that do not qualify as eligible news businesses under the law.”

https://pressprogress.ca/canadian-news-websites-will-soon-be-blocked-in-canada-but-american-news-outlets-will-still-be-available/

Canadian News Websites Will Soon Be Blocked in Canada. But American News Outlets Will Still Be Available.

Canada’s online news blackout won’t impact foreign news outlets that cover stories about Canada or Canadian politics

PressProgress
@llebrun @mgeist
So Postmedia, TorStar, et al lobbied for a new law that would replace them online with Fox, NYTimes rather than one which would tax those competitors' online platforms?
Are they only in the hedge fund debt servicing business now?
@AlisonCreekside @llebrun @mgeist Law asks big tech to pay for something they previously got for free. EU, Australia going this route to try to get some money going back to the people who actually do journalism. Google and Meta are having a tantrum because they are afraid the U.S. will follow suit.

@llebrun @mgeist <dramatic eye roll> Like, did we all just forget how to use a website in the past dozen years? Or am I in the minority somehow?

If I catch wind of something blowing up in social media I don't go to facebook or google news, I go to <newspaper website> or cbc.ca or tvo.org to get it from source.

Although Im thinking of firing up my RSS reader again.

*Thats it kids, we're going back to 2011!*

@llebrun People need to learn that Google is not the only game in town when it comes to search.

@llebrun @mgeist But a fantastic opportunity for us to serve #Canadian news to those living in #Canada and elsewhere.

Rather than get angry at Google, let's use their terrible decisions to our advantage.

#news #publishing #journalism

@ParanoidFactoid @llebrun @mgeist

By all means, use this opportunity to promote Canadian journalism.

But let's not pretend there was ever a reason to be angry at Google or Facebook about this.

They were showing extracts of Canadian news and linking back to the original reports, which is allowable under copyright law as fair use.

Then our myopic politicians, egged on by dinosaur media, passed a law saying they would have to pay the sites to continue doing that.

[...]

@ParanoidFactoid @llebrun @mgeist

So Google et al had a choice: they could continue to do as before, and pay this "link tax", or they could stop showing these excerpts of articles by Canadian media, along with the links back to them, covered by this act.

There is no third option.

So they chose option (b). That was entirely predictable; C-18 was a stupid idea, and fundamentally misunderstands the nature of the web.

You can't be mad about the choice we forced them to make.

@cazabon @llebrun @mgeist

I'm not mad, I see opportunity! And that was my point.

You go right ahead and continue defending Google here. Enjoy yourself.

@ParanoidFactoid @llebrun @mgeist

I'm not defending #Google (or Facebook, etc) - I dislike Google intensely and don't use any of their services in my personal life.

I'm criticizing our #politicians for passing a law that led to this situation.

I'm criticizing them, and the dinosaur media orgs who thought this would turn into a cash cow, for failing to understand both the functionality and the economics of the web.

I'm criticizing them for being stupid, and then getting mad at others for it.