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CNN Becomes First Major News Outlet to Quit Facebook in Australia Citing Defamation Risk

The news organisation does not feature prominently in Australian media consumption, but the decision could have reverberations across the industry if other outlets followed suit.
Byron Kaye
Sep 29 2021
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The news organisation does not feature prominently in Australian media consumption, but the decision could have reverberations across the industry if other outlets followed suit.
The Facebook logo is displayed on a mobile phone in this picture illustration taken December 2, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Johanna Geron/Illustration
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Sydney: Multinational television channel CNN said it has stopped posting articles on Australian Facebook Inc pages, citing a court ruling that publishers are liable for defamation in public comments and the social media firm's refusal to help it disable comments in the country.

The move makes CNN, which is owned by AT&T Inc, the first major news organisation to pull its Australian Facebook presence since the country's high court ruled this month that publishers were legally responsible for comments posted below stories - even if the stories themselves were not defamatory.

Facebook declined a request to help CNN and other publishers disable public comments in the country following the ruling, the organisation said.

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"We are disappointed that Facebook, once again, has failed to ensure its platform is a place for credible journalism and productive dialogue around current events among its users," a CNN spokeswoman said in a statement.

She added that CNN would continue to publish content on its own platforms in Australia.

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Also read: Australian Parliament Passes Law to Force Google, Facebook to Pay for News

A Facebook spokesperson said recent court decisions had shown the need for reform in Australian defamation law and the company looked forward to "greater clarity and certainty in this area".

"While it's not our place to provide legal guidance to CNN, we have provided them with the latest information on tools we make available to help publishers manage comments," the spokesperson added.

Facebook says it has several features available for publishers and other users to restrict who can comment on posts.

Social media is a central channel for distributing content in Australia, with about two-thirds of the country's 25 million population on Facebook, according to industry figures. About a third of the country's population used Facebook to source news in 2021, a University of Canberra report said.

This article went live on September twenty-ninth, two thousand twenty one, at thirty-two minutes past one in the afternoon.

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