ABC新闻:澳大利亚要求脸谱网和谷歌必须支付新闻费
Nearly 3-and-a-half million Australians could lose their jobs due to the coronavirus pandemic. The Grattan Institute says between 14 and 26 percent of the entire workforce may lose work — if they haven't already — and the crisis will have an enduring impact on the Australian economy for years to come. Treasury has forecast unemployment will rise to ten percent in the June quarter. But the Grattan Institute says the figures are higher if you analyse just how many jobs in Australia rely on working in close physical proximity to others.
Overseas, COVID-19 has now claimed more than 40-thousand lives in the US, and more than 100-thousand in Europe. There's also increasing pressure on governments to lift restrictions, with protestors taking to the streets in a number of US states over the weekend. Spain has announced that it will begin to ease lockdown measures from next Monday — with children allowed out of their homes to play in parks for the first time in almost 6 weeks.
Tech giants like Facebook and Google will be ordered to pay money to traditional media outets for news content that appears on their sites. Under a new mandatory code of conduct, the federal government will become the first in the world to impose financial penalties against online organisations who siphon news content for free.
Malcolm Turnbull's book publisher has confirmed it will refer the distribution of pirated copies of his memoir to the Australian federal police. It comes after one of Scott Morrison's closest advisors apologised for distributing unauthorised copies of the former PM's memoir. The book's publisher also sent the staff member a "cease and desist" order for what it described as a "massive breach of intellectual property".