Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Google blocking news for some Canadians in test

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2023 04:42 PM
  • Google blocking news for some Canadians in test

OTTAWA - Google is blocking some Canadian users from viewing news content in what the company says is a test run of a potential response to the Liberal government's online news bill.

Also known as Bill C-18, the Online News Act would require digital giants such as Google and Meta, which owns Facebook, to negotiate deals that would compensate Canadian media companies for republishing their content on their platforms.

The company said Wednesday that it is temporarily limiting access to news content for under four per cent of its Canadian users as it assesses possible responses to the bill. The change applies to its ubiquitous search engine as well as the Discover feature on Android devices, which carries news and sports stories.

All types of news content are being affected by the test, which will run for about five weeks, the company said. That includes content created by Canadian broadcasters and newspapers.

"We're briefly testing potential product responses to Bill C-18 that impact a very small percentage of Canadian users," Google spokesman Shay Purdy said in a written statement on Wednesday in response to questions from The Canadian Press.

The company runs thousands of tests each year to assess any potential changes to its search engine, he added.

"We've been fully transparent about our concern that C-18 is overly broad and, if unchanged, could impact products Canadians use and rely on every day," Purdy said.

A spokeswoman for Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez said Canadians will not be intimidated and called it disappointing that Google is borrowing from Meta's playbook.

Last year, that company threatened to block news off its site in response to the bill.

"This didn't work in Australia, and it won't work here because Canadians won’t be intimidated. At the end of the day, all we're asking the tech giants to do is compensate journalists when they use their work," spokeswoman Laura Scaffidi said in a statement Wednesday.

"Canadians need to have access to quality, fact-based news at the local and national levels, and that's why we introduced the Online News Act. Tech giants need to be more transparent and accountable to Canadians."

MORE Tech ARTICLES

An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable

An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable
Researchers from Columbia Engineering and the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a unique electric generator that is optically transparent...

An electric generator that is bendable, stretchable

Google announces Android Lollipop, other new products

Google announces Android Lollipop, other new products
Google has announced that its new Android operating system, Lollipop, is set for release Friday, and also presented new models of Nexus products to compete with Apple...

Google announces Android Lollipop, other new products

New optical device to help find Earth-like planets

New optical device to help find Earth-like planets
"We are building a telescope that will let us see the Sun the way we would see other stars," said David Phillips, staff scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.....

New optical device to help find Earth-like planets

Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This

Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This
By just tweeting out facts to his seven million-plus followers, a 23-year-old youngster here is making $500,000 a year.

Want to Know How to Make $500,000 a year on Twitter? Read This

User history to make websites more interactive

User history to make websites more interactive
Small cues that display a user's transaction history may help a website feel almost as interactive as chatting with an online customer service agent, paving the way...

User history to make websites more interactive

'3D printing 'technology of the future'

'3D printing 'technology of the future'
Three-dimensional printing, sensors, the cloud and personalisation are "the future in technology," according to Amar Hanspal, vice president of the San Rafael, California-based Autodesk manufacturing company.

'3D printing 'technology of the future'