European Court of Justice rules Meta must compensate Italian publishers for content use

Alfonso Maruccia

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EU vs US: Europe's highest judicial authority has sided with Italian publishers, ruling that Meta must compensate news organizations. The court stated that social media companies are no different from other service providers and must negotiate licenses to lawfully use publishers' content. The question now is whether Meta will comply.

In a recent press release, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU/Curia) explained its decision in a case involving Meta and the Italian regulatory authority (C-797/23). The EU's highest judicial body stated that member states may grant local publishers the right to fair compensation, requiring online service providers such as Mark Zuckerberg's company to pay for the use of their content.

The C-797/23 case was initiated by Meta, which asked the CJEU to intervene after the Italian Communications Regulatory Authority approved a new policy on fair compensation for newspapers and other journalistic publishers. The policy allows publishers and service providers to reach individual agreements, after which AGCOM can step in to determine appropriate compensation if necessary.

Meta argued that AGCOM's policy would conflict with the EU's framework for publisher rights under the Digital Single Market Directive. However, according to the Court's ruling, fair compensation mechanisms are consistent with EU law, including the DSM framework. The compensation covers the authorization for platforms to use publishers' content on services such as Facebook, while publishers also retain the right to refuse such authorization or make their content available free of charge.

The CJEU said that AGCOM's requirements for negotiation and fair compensation strike a balanced approach between business freedom (in this case, Meta's) and intellectual property protection. Meta stated that it is reviewing the Court's decision and is seeking "constructive" cooperation with EU and Italian authorities, while the case is now being referred back to Italy's national courts.

According to the European Publishers Council, the trade organization representing leading media groups across Europe, the ruling represents a major win for online journalism. The EPC added that the decision can be seen as a rebuke of Meta and other major technology companies, which it claims have exploited their dominant market position to extract value from online content.

As highlighted by EPC Executive Director Angela Mills Wade, "quality journalism depends on the ability ⁠of publishers to recoup the investments required to produce trusted news and information."

While Meta has expressed a willingness to cooperate with regulators, it has a history of resisting similar policy changes. In Canada, for example, legislation requiring social media platforms to compensate publishers led Meta to restrict users from sharing links to Canadian news sites. The ban remains in place after more than three years.

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And I'm sure most of us agree with the European body!
Translation: "I have no idea of the merits of this case, or what it's even about -- but I love to see large corporations penalized, justified or not."

Meta/facebook gets a beoch-slap? Excellent!
Quite wrong. Meta will simply stop linking to Italian media; viewership of said media will fall off a cliff, and most of said firms will declare bankruptcy.
 
Meta will just prevent linking to these news organizations and the news organizations will cry. Because of Meta, these news organizations gets to boost their viewership numbers and in turn get more ad revenue. If they pile on the ads like The Daily Mail does, they'll be bringing in the dough.
 
About 50% of adults use social media for news because of convenience, activity and avoid paywalls among others. Of course you also have remove paywall sites too.
 
Individual user on metas platform has an oppinion about a news piece and meta must pay royalty for it?

As the article says about Canada: if meta does not want to pay for it, but loves to earn money from users using it, then they should just restrict links or charge to use them, and then pay to publishers.

But typical US: it's ok to use money from all, but it's not fine to pay taxes and other people's work. Well, they enforce the rest of the world to pay royalties to US companies, but not the other way around...

The same with the AI: it's fine to pay for the service, but the info that AI got, they don't feel in the right to pay for it. Some times I ask some stuff and the AI answers but they got the info from someone else and they don't pay the website to get that info from.

I really hope the EU makes strict rules for this, as the US just wants money no matter what.
 
About 50% of adults use social media for news because of convenience, activity and avoid paywalls among others. Of course you also have remove paywall sites too.
Social media is NOT convenience, just laziness. If you pay a newspaper, most news you need are there and generally independent.

Social media is just a source of manipulated news and paid people to give a brand good reviews. But yeah, many adults, specially in some countries, have a peanut brain and swallow everything a social media says it's cool
 
Another EU money steal, year after year after year they dream up new methods of theft, grifters.
You are very funny but if the EU politicians didn't have so many US companies' stocks and applied the taxes the US companies should pay as the European companies, the US company's profit in Europe would sink as a rock...
 
You are very funny but if the EU politicians didn't have so many US companies' stocks and applied the taxes the US companies should pay as the European companies, the US company's profit in Europe would sink as a rock...

Good thing that, for that additional reason, the EU politicians continue to put greed above all else.

Much like the US. Huh, interesting how that happens.
 
You are very funny but if the EU politicians didn't have so many US companies' stocks and applied the taxes the US companies should pay as the European companies, the US company's profit in Europe would sink as a rock...
There's nothing funny about it! The EU bureaucrats are grifting scumbags. They would confiscate ALL income if allowed.
 
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