How Will Elon Feel When He Realizes Congress Is Trying To Force Him To Throw Free Money At Newspapers He Hates?

from the pay-attention-elon dept

We’ve written many times about the many problems of the JCPA (the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act). As noted, the bill is a really sketchy bit of corruption: creating a link tax to force internet companies to funnel money to news organization owners for… sending them traffic. Everything about the JCPA is wrong and broken. Supporters insist it’s not a link tax nor a change to copyright law, but it is both. The fundamental argument in the bill is that large sites that link to news organizations need to pay for a license for “access.” But access to what? There’s no license for access for content put on the web for free. It’s just… the web.

The bill also has a bunch of nasty features. The main mechanism by which it works is that it allows “news organizations” to join together to “negotiate” for such a license. The collective bargaining part isn’t such a big deal, other than the fact that it’s collective bargaining over something that is inherently free: the right to link and send traffic to a website. But, as part of the bill, sites that can’t reach a negotiated agreement to pay up have to go to baseball-style arbitration, where each side submits a number and the arbitrator chooses which one wins. So sites can’t just say “we’re not paying.” They may be forced to.

Furthermore, this will allow today’s worst disinformation providers to demand free cash from tech companies and, because the bill forbids any sort of “retaliation,” it effectively allows the worst propagandists to force sites like Google and Facebook to carry and promote their links, because anything else will be seen as retaliation. So the bill will help give free money to nonsense peddlers.

And, contrary to the claims of supporters of the bill, it won’t help journalism either. Most of the money will go to large private equity firms that have been buying up regional newspapers, firing most of the employees, setting up a barebones staff, and taking in the pretty significant regular cash flow from long time subscribers who just continue subscribing via inertia. Do we really think those private equity folks are going to take this money and invest in better journalism, or just pocket it?

Anyway, as we noted yesterday, reports are that some Congressional leaders (namely Senators Chuck Schumer and Mitch McConnell) have cut a deal to include the JCPA in the must-pass NDAA, despite this bill having literally nothing to do with national defense (the purported purpose of the NDAA).

Lots of organizations have put out statements and/or action tools to protest this. Public Knowledge released a big group letter. Fight for the Future has a tool to contact Congress about this. Chamber of Progress has a really nice tool for sending a letter to Congress as well, while also highlighting how the law would help fund nonsense peddlers. CCIA also has some TV ads explaining the problems with the bill.

It’s unclear how the companies would react. While the bill does effectively say that sites cannot punish websites for demanding payment, it does seem like sites could just stop linking to news. And Meta/Facebook is already threatening to do just that:

“If Congress passes an ill-considered journalism bill as part of national security legislation,” Meta said in a statement tweeted by spokesman Andy Stone, “we will be forced to consider removing news from our platform altogether rather than submit to government-mandated negotiations that unfairly disregard any value we provide to news outlets through increased traffic and subscriptions.”

This is not an idle threat. When similar legislation passed in Australia, the company blocked links to news stories for a few days, until the Australian government made some concessions in the law. While many argued that this step backfired for Facebook, I still don’t understand how. The company was only responding to the incentives placed before it. Of course, I’m not sure if Google could or would follow suit and block links to news sites, because that would be a huge mess for the entire internet.

And then there’s the question of Twitter. Technically, it does not seem that Twitter currently meets the requirements to be subject to the law, but as with so many of these laws, they base the requirements on statistics that are not entirely easy to determine. But, given Musk’s claims that he plans to have a billion users by 2024, that would trigger the law — meaning that Elon would then be forced to start paying news organizations.

That seems particularly interesting given Musk’s pretty vocal hatred for mainstream news organizations and his stated belief that users on Twitter can effectively replace them. Yet, under this law, should it pass, Musk would be forced to first negotiate with those media organizations and then pay them for merely sending traffic to them.

Of course, if Musk had a functioning policy and communications department he might be paying attention to all this and could speak out, like Meta did. Instead, he’s mostly fired them all and is focused on promoting culture war nonsense.

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Comments on “How Will Elon Feel When He Realizes Congress Is Trying To Force Him To Throw Free Money At Newspapers He Hates?”

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61 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

You are so mentally comletent, lol. Thanks for the advice.

The proper procedure is this: a “Comletency Agent” from the Comletency department will take your incredibly insightful observation under consideration, and contact you and then, award you comletency points, whereby you will be de facto elected–without an actual verifiable election–to the position of “comletent superhero”, with your comletent chest brimming with glorious medals and awards.

None of them will contain any real actual gold, but WOW! they will be shiny! And you, will still be YOU.

Poor, shiny Toom 1275, basking in the shmear of glory days gone by.

TaboToka (profile) says:

The GQP house means it doesn't matter

HR 1735 hasn’t even made it out of committee, which means there is no time left on the calendar to get this to a vote and to reconciliation before the 117th Congress comes to a close and the 118 wack-a-loon dumpster fire begins on Jan 3.

The GQP will be too busy drooling over Hunter’s laptop, submitting bogus articles of impeachment, investigating Dr. Faucci, and going after the FBI (for raiding the compound of Dear Leader) to do anything of consequence.

Whatever Speaker of the House emerges from the slime will be unable to form a coalition from the Klown Kar to get anything done.

Grab some popcorn and warm yourself by the fire. It is going to be a loooong two years.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

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Samuel Abram (profile) says:

Re:

We do have problems in choosing our representatitves, what with gerrymandering and all that–although in NY State, our congressional maps were gerrymandered towards the democrats until recently, when the gerrymandered maps were struck down by a state-level court and the GOP reaped the spoils in a fairer map as far as NY State is concerned. Unfortunately, it doesn’t apply to GOP-rigged states like Texas and Florida, though.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Somehow it’s Musk’s personal duty to fight blatantly corrupt legislation….

No, TFS simply notes Elon’s past history of lashing out a his “Hate-Target Of The Day”, and that Murdock and crowd are frequent inhabitants of that list. From there, it’s duck-soup to wonder in which direction his ranting will shift – against link taxes, aka “government interference with my private and personal business”; or will he just go nuclear and gut all tweets that include links to any known news organization. Either way, he’s not going to just sit back and do nothing, you can take that to the bank.

Like has been said before, the thing in regret most in life is that I didn’t buy into popcorn futures when I had the chance.

sumgai

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Oh, you just noticed that did you?

Some of us actual lefties noticed that way back in the John Ashcroft era–but our voices were drowned out by all of you interlopers and your fake liberalism, drowning out actual activism, and substituting Twitter meme’s in place of actual dialogues in the streets.

You are as fake-liberal as they come.

Yeah, but wutabout CHINA! says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Sure, I could have done that-if there wasn’t history involved in my comment.

I accept, validate, and consider your comment as worthy criticism–and respect your initiative to take me to task on it–as long as you can also substantiate the fact that the commenter I directed that at has a record of egoism, and vain posting habits that attempt to ignorantly invalidate decades of work that came before him, and who routinely uses personal attacks and vitriol against others–sometimes in racist or sectarian biased ways.

That said–yeah-wouldn’t it be nice of TD had rational mods? Or even, fixed their easily exploited flag feature?

Regardless–I generally like what you have to say, and a time or two, you have caused me to pause and think, and I appreciate that.

Yeah, but China! says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Mr. Abrams, I appreciate, accept, and validate your criticism–I did indeed engage in that. For good reason, mind you….

So, maybe you could also withstand my own criticism? Please stop enabling these self congratulating egoists and the bathroom reach-around crowd here at TD, as certain commenters are routinely given a free pass for their rude, abrasive and extremely inaccurate and historically uninformed personal attacks–because, you know–they are ” TD Insiders,” and all of that.

Simply put, the modern left cannot tel a Mossadi jihadi from a Russian troll, a bottle cap, or the Tardis (which you might know, had many incarnations beyond the sanctioned and historical one). This ain’t my first Bull Run here at TD, ya know….

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Once again, 1A covers no less than 5 different “grounds” for protection, “free speech” being only one of them (and not even the first one at that). There’s also the “freedom to associate as one wishes”, and that’s the key issue here. For all of the posturing and laying of red herrings across the trail, the only time the accuser wins is when they prove, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that [insert your favorite Social Media Site here] has no right, under 1A, to disassociate themselves from the accuser. One could easily, and correctly, note that no such “win” has ever been recorded, and that making book that such will soon be recorded…. well, I wouldn’t hold my breath.

Boba Fatt (profile) says:

How is this even possible?

Someone stops me on the street and asks “Hey, is there anywhere to get something to eat around here?”

I say “Sure, there’s Joe’s Burgers, right down the street.”

So now I owe Joe money for sending him business? And I can’t not tell people about Joe’s Burgers because that would be retaliation?

Many years ago there were businesses who published what other people said or did without paying for it, and made money by attaching ads to their summaries, and it was perfectly legal. Those businesses were called “newspapers”.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Once again.

Tipoffs are NOT collusion. Or a stack of demands to remove content with the veiled threat of kicking your company out of the country if said demands are not met.

Maybe you need to actually read about how authcap countries force social media to bend the knee sometimes. There’s actual FUCKING ARTICLES written about that, some on this very site itself. Those countries are what your fucking politicians want to emulate.

Or perhaps you’re the sort of folk who wants that to happen, albeit with a white supremacists bent, hmmm?

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