I hit my first instance of Meta blocking Canadian news content.

Rachael sent me a story from #CBCVancouver via Instagram messages.

The thumbnail is visible in messages (1), but when I click, I get the restricted message (2)

I wasn’t following the CBCVancouver account, and when I search for and visit the profile, I get a different message (3)

I guess Rachael hasn’t had this rolled out to her account yet.

Remember, there are no good guys in this #BillC18 debacle.

@canada

  • Ulrich_the_Old@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    All news sites can be accessed directly without facebook. I quit both twitter and facebook but I never stopped reading the news.

      • EhForumUser@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        It’s actually a lot better to just go to the news sites.

        Not true at all. Being from a small community, news is pretty well only reported by the local CTV news reporter. Said reporter was maintaining his own Facebook page, and through that I could zero in on his content that is relevant to where I live.

        If I go to CTV directly, there is no way to get only the local news. It’s mixed in with news about places hundreds of kilometres away. News about a place hundreds of kilometres away has little relevance to my life. If you dig deep you can find the local news somewhere in there, but unless you work as a full-time researcher, who has that kind of time?

        Maybe said reporter will create his own website in the wake of this – but at the same time, maybe he doesn’t have means to do so. There isn’t a lot of money in being a small town reporter. Facebook made that accessible to most with little investment and to those with little technical knowhow.

        Maybe CTV will smarten up and build a website that is more usable. But not likely, as why bother trying when you can just go crying to the government?

        But as it stands right now, the only thing keeping us abreast in the local news is that he is posting to X. But presumably it will go the same way, or, more likely, end up bankrupt in the near future.

  • ANGRY_MAPLE@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I think this is a nuanced situation. On one hand, the government let this slide for a long time, and too many people became reliant on Facebook for their news. I believe it’s very important for people to have the ability to be informed on the world around them. We should be spreading awareness about these things for people who apparently forgot.

    On the other hand, it’s Facebook. Facebook is also not exactly known for being unbaised or truthful. Provably false things have no business being passed off as news, regardless of what side of the coin you’re on. Information is power. We deserve the truth.

    We can still use news websites, news apps, FOSS sites like lemmy, the newspaper, watch the news on TV stations, etc. Why are so many people acting like this is the end of all free information? It it really that difficult for people to find another source? I can almost guarantee that you can list 4 or 5 news outlets from the top of your head. If you visit their pages, they will still get their ad revenue. They never got that revenue before because of Facebook.

    It’s also another situation where people expect other people’s labour for free. It’s becoming grating. Why are we defending a billion dollar company expecting this from small local companies? Journalists have to eat, too. If it was an easy, time-relaxed job, everyone would be a journalist. It’s almost irritating that so many people expect them to permanently lose out on their hard earned money for the sake of saving people the effort of a few different clicks.

    Where is any of this anger or frustration towards Meta, the billion dollar company that refuses to pay for these articles? Meta could have negotiated, but decided to just shut it down instead. Why are we cheering on a profiteering company from the US over our own local news sources?

    Some people will argue “they’ll get less clicks now”, but I’d argue that many of those clicks just sent people through an amp-website that mainly benefitted Meta. I’m kind of suprised to see these posts on a FOSS- heavy community, to be honest. I though not having one corporate overlord was kind of the whole point.

    • ANGRY_MAPLE@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I would honestly recommend for anyone in another country to also use another source for news. Think about it, what would you do if Facebook stopped it all tomorrow, or shut down entirely? Would you still have access to information about the world around you to the extent that you do now?

      Should you trust Facebook that much?

    • cadekat@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      The big picture might be nuanced, but link taxes aren’t. They’re a ridiculous way to try and solve a problem.

      Would it be fair to charge a phonebook for listing the mailing address of a business/person? No. Mailing addresses are just bits of information that describe where to find something. Same with links.

      If a business wants to make money from people going to their physical location, they stop you at the door and ask for a ticket. They don’t go after phonebooks for telling people where they’re located.

  • DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Remember, there are no good guys in this #BillC18 debacle.

    We disagree on this point, I think the news orgs are the good guys.

    Why? Because groups like Meta are profiting from scaping the site without compensation. It’s not like Meta is simply showing the headline and thumbnail, they are showing some of the content from the article itself.

    Meta’s not giving free promotion, they are profiting off of the content of others.

    Edit: it looks like the information that Facebook shows is consensual via “Open Graph”

    • EhForumUser@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      they are showing some of the content from the article itself.

      They are showing the content found in the og:description meta tag, you mean. The “og” bit stands for Open Graph, which is a protocol developed by Facebook so that news sites can define the content they want Facebook to show.

      If news sites don’t want Facebook to display this information, they could stop providing it via Open Graph. Again, Open Graph was created exactly to give publishers control over what Facebook shows when linking to their resource. A quick check of the major sites in Canada reveals that Open Graph use is omnipresent and that they are quite welcoming of Facebook using their work.

      Funny, that.

    • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      The real issue is how social media intentionally changed the way we consume that content. Attention span has drastically went down since Facebook released and time spent on websites that aren’t Facebook as well. In the end Meta gets the advertising money and people who click to check the articles don’t stick around long enough to be profitable.

    • festus@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      The bill penalizes Meta even if they link but do zero scraping. Regardless though, news organizations can breathe a sigh of relief as Meta is terminating the totally one-sided relationship where only Meta benefited at news organizations’ expense.

  • wrw@infosec.exchange
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    1 year ago

    @boris @canada

    What I find especially amusing is that Facebook is blocking The Beaverton. Which says all sorts of uncomfortable things about their ability to discern between journalism and not-journalism.

      • Gaëtan Perrault@mstdn.ca
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        1 year ago

        @EhForumUser @wrw

        But The Beaverton isn’t “news” either, it’s literally fiction. If The Beaverton is “news”, then so is some fanfiction blog with ads on it. So is every web comic.

        Ultimately, it’s really just that FB/Meta don’t want to pay people for content. They want to get paid.

        Categories like “journalism” or “news” are just BS terms used to cover what they’re doing.

  • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Is this an image album?

    It only displays one image (presumably the first one?) on Jerboa. If not for the (1)/(2)/(3) I’d have no idea.