CNN —Google has agreed to pay Canadian publishers for their news content, backing down from a high-stakes threat to block all news content produced in the country on its platforms after the tech giant and the Canadian government announced a deal Wednesday to avert the looming crisis.
The agreement resolves tensions between Google and Canada over a controversial law known as C-18 requiring digital platforms to compensate news publishers for their work.
The Google agreement marks a departure from the path taken by Instagram-parent Meta, which opted to pull news content from its platforms in Canada in response to C-18.
The option for Google to negotiate with a single collective helps address one of the tech giant’s main objections to the law.
But how the agreement with Google plays out could potentially shape the course of those policies.
Persons:
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Organizations:
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Locations:
Canada, of Canada