This is what Facebook looks like in Australia after the social media giant pulled all news content
- Facebook is blocking Australian users from seeing, sharing, and interacting with news on the site.
- Moreover, all Facebook users worldwide aren't able to see news shared by Australian news outlets.
- Facebook now looks remarkably different for Australian users.
On Wednesday, Facebook removed critical functionality for its Australian users: the ability to see, share, and interact with news content on the social media platform.
The abrupt change, Facebook said, was due to a recently proposed law in Australia.
"The proposed law fundamentally misunderstands the relationship between our platform and publishers who use it to share news content. It has left us facing a stark choice: attempt to comply with a law that ignores the realities of this relationship, or stop allowing news content on our services in Australia," a blog post from Facebook said. "With a heavy heart, we are choosing the latter."
The reality of the change - for Facebook users in Australia, and for users around the world attempting to view or post news from Australian publications - is stark.
The Facebook page for Australia's most widely read newspaper, The Herald Sun, is completely wiped of content:
Similarly, if a Facebook user in Australia attempts to view any news organization, the content is blocked - whether that news is from an Australian publication or something else.
BBC News reporter Frances Mao highlighted an example from her own publication:
Moreover, whether you're in Australia or anywhere else in the world, Facebook is blocking all users from sharing or interacting with news content from Australian publications.
When I attempted to share news from The Herald Sun on my personal Facebook page, the pop-up message below blocked me from posting:
The move to block all Australian news content is considered the "nuclear option" in Facebook's ongoing battle with the Australian government over proposed "News Media Bargaining Code" legislation.
If passed, the legislation would require tech giants like Facebook and Google to pay news publishers for their content. Just hours before Facebook announced its plans for Australia, Google announced a landmark partnership with News Corp, which is owned by Australian media magnate Rupert Murdoch, to pay "significant" sums for news content.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Thursday that Facebook's "actions to unfriend" the country were "as arrogant as they were disappointing," in a post on Facebook.
Beyond blocking news pages, Australian Facebook users began discovering a variety of non-news Facebook pages that were blocked - from essential health service pages to food banks.
Facebook is reinstating some of those pages, but pointed blame at Australia's proposed legislation for the error. "As the law does not provide clear guidance on the definition of news content, we have taken a broad definition in order to respect the law as drafted," a Facebook spokesperson told Insider. "However, we will reverse any Pages that are inadvertently impacted."
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