In step with Australia, Canada's 'The Online News Act' comes after more than 450 news outlets have closed in the country since 2008 as digital platforms took over the space
Montreal, Canada: The Canadian government unveiled legislation Tuesday that would require global digital giants to pay for local news content, in step with a landmark law passed by Australia last year.
The Online News Act, which is expected to be passed into law by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government with backing from a small leftist faction, comes after more than 450 news outlets closed in Canada since 2008 as digital platforms took over the space.
"The news sector in Canada is in crisis and this contributes to the heightened public mistrust and the rise of harmful disinformation in our society," Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez told a news conference.
He noted billions of dollars in advertising revenues that once fed newsrooms across Canada now go mostly to two companies: Facebook and Google.