
Alphabet Inc.’s Google moved closer to blocking Canadians from viewing news links on its search engine, after it rejected government regulations meant to placate its concerns about an impending online content law.
It’s the latest blow to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government and its efforts to compel Google and Meta Platforms Inc. to negotiate payments with local publishers under the Online News Act, due to come into effect on Dec. 19. Google’s move comes about a month after Meta similarly dismissed the regulations and said that it will continue blocking users in Canada from seeing news on Facebook and Instagram to avoid running afoul of the law.
The details of the bill published on Sept. 1 said that both companies can avoid arbitration by agreeing to pay news outlets a minimum of four per cent of their annual revenue in Canada in return for carrying links to news articles. Under those terms, Google would be expected to pay about $172 million per year, according to the government’s estimates. The offer was an apparent olive branch to address concerns of uncapped financial liabilities.
“While the regulations seek to ‘provide clarity about the application of the act,’ they unfortunately create greater uncertainty, by attempting to transform the mandatory bargaining model set out in the Act into more of a levy model,” Google Canada said in a statement Oct. 6.
“The result of this exercise is a hybrid model that captures the worst of both worlds, imposing the obligations of a levy without providing any of its certainty, and requiring Google to absorb all of the responsibilities and costs associated with negotiating agreements and disbursing funds while eliminating any flexibility in actual arrangements,” the company said.
“The timing problem remains, potentially putting Google in a position of having to suspend links to news content,” according to the statement.









