Meta Platforms says it will no longer pay US news organisations to have their material appear in Facebook's News Tab as it reallocates resources in the face of the economic downturn and changing user behavior.
The company said Thursday that most people “do not come to
Facebook for news, and as a business it doesn't make sense to over invest in
areas that don't align with user preferences.”
Meta, then called Facebook, launched the partnerships in
2019. The “News Tab" section in the Facebook mobile app only displays
headlines — and nothing else — from The Wall Street Journal, The Washington
Post, BuzzFeed News, Business Insider, NBC, USA Today and the Los Angeles
Times, among others.
The company did not say how much it was paying the news
organisations, but reports put it in the millions of dollars for large outlets
such as The Wall Street Journal.
The Associated Press did not participate in the initiative.
At the time the program launched, CEO Mark Zuckerberg told
the AP that he saw "an opportunity to set up new long-term, stable
financial relationships with publishers.”
But Meta, which is based in Menlo Park, California, said in
a statement Thursday that a “lot has changed since we signed deals three years
ago to test bringing additional news links to Facebook News in the US”.
On Wednesday, Meta Platforms posted its first revenue
decline in its history and forecast weak results for the current quarter as
well.
Meta does not pay for news content that outlets post on its
platform. The News Tab deals, the company said Thursday, were for “incremental
content, e.g., ensuring that we had access to more of their article links and
that we were including a range of topic areas at launch.”
The company said Facebook News will continue in the other
countries it's currently in, and the shift in the US won't change the deals in
those places — the UK, France, Germany and Australia.