Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation

Governments across the world are struggling to address the market dominance of technology companies through increased regulation. The Australian Federal government found itself leading the world in platform regulation when, in 2021, it enacted the Australian News Media and Digital Platforms Mandator...

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Main Authors: Bossio, Diana, Flew, Terry, Meese, James, Leaver, Tama, Barnet, Belinda
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87897
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author Bossio, Diana
Flew, Terry
Meese, James
Leaver, Tama
Barnet, Belinda
author_facet Bossio, Diana
Flew, Terry
Meese, James
Leaver, Tama
Barnet, Belinda
author_sort Bossio, Diana
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Governments across the world are struggling to address the market dominance of technology companies through increased regulation. The Australian Federal government found itself leading the world in platform regulation when, in 2021, it enacted the Australian News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code. The furore surrounding the introduction of the legislation, and Facebook's subsequent Australian ‘news ban’ exposed the limits of a regulatory model that has previously left the tech industry to moderate itself. In this paper, we argue the introduction of the Code is a leading example of a global trajectory towards regulatory change, which sees governments move from a reactive regulation model to specific interventions around the governance of digital media spaces. We discuss how best to measure the successes and failures around this more interventionist model through a case study of the implementation of the Code in Australia. More broadly we consider how global platforms have responded, and whether the reform is an effective regulatory model for other national governments to emulate.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-878972022-03-04T06:06:49Z Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation Bossio, Diana Flew, Terry Meese, James Leaver, Tama Barnet, Belinda 2001 - Communication and Media Studies 4701 - Communication and media studies Governments across the world are struggling to address the market dominance of technology companies through increased regulation. The Australian Federal government found itself leading the world in platform regulation when, in 2021, it enacted the Australian News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code. The furore surrounding the introduction of the legislation, and Facebook's subsequent Australian ‘news ban’ exposed the limits of a regulatory model that has previously left the tech industry to moderate itself. In this paper, we argue the introduction of the Code is a leading example of a global trajectory towards regulatory change, which sees governments move from a reactive regulation model to specific interventions around the governance of digital media spaces. We discuss how best to measure the successes and failures around this more interventionist model through a case study of the implementation of the Code in Australia. More broadly we consider how global platforms have responded, and whether the reform is an effective regulatory model for other national governments to emulate. 2022 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87897 10.1002/poi3.284 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wiley fulltext
spellingShingle 2001 - Communication and Media Studies
4701 - Communication and media studies
Bossio, Diana
Flew, Terry
Meese, James
Leaver, Tama
Barnet, Belinda
Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title_full Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title_fullStr Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title_full_unstemmed Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title_short Australia's News Media Bargaining Code and the global turn towards platform regulation
title_sort australia's news media bargaining code and the global turn towards platform regulation
topic 2001 - Communication and Media Studies
4701 - Communication and media studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87897