South Africa can save journalism by recognizing its public role

The Competition Commission has ordered Google to pay R688 million over five years to compensate South African news publishers for value extracted from the industry. This ruling provides some relief amid a distorted digital market but frustrates publishers over Meta's absolution and inaction on misinformation. Treating journalism as a public good through policy interventions is seen as crucial for sustainability.

The Competition Commission's recent findings highlight a broken market for South African journalism, where digital platforms have accentuated but not caused the decline. In a ruling, Google must pay R688 million over five years as compensation, acknowledging distortions from dominant players. Reactions are mixed: the payment offers breathing room for publishers to seek sustainability, yet the decision absolves Meta of algorithmic deprecation of news content and overlooks a decade of misinformation spread.

As platforms face their own disruptions, artificial intelligence poses both threats and opportunities. Google's AI Overviews are reducing referral traffic to publishers by double digits, straining digital strategies. However, AI can enable efficient coverage and investigations if harnessed properly. Thriving newsrooms will focus on original, human-driven journalism—cultivating sources, exercising judgment, and holding power accountable—that machines cannot replicate.

Journalism functions as a public good, yet the free market underinvests in it. Studies from the 1980s and 1990s showed profitable publishers failing to bolster newsrooms despite growth. South Africa has lost over half its journalism workforce to disruptions. The State Capture investigations exemplify the value: exposés led to billions in asset recoveries and prosecutions of officials, benefiting the nation far beyond publishers' gains.

A 2023 FT Strategies study reveals it's ten times harder to sustain journalism in Africa than in northern Europe, due to market conditions. The local crisis is acute, with declining municipal governance and service delivery going unreported as community newspapers vanish. Without local reporters at council meetings, corruption and maladministration persist unchecked.

Short-term aids like the Digital News Transformation Fund help, but long-term change demands policy reform. The Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) has 19 recommendations, including tax incentives for readers and advertisers, development finance, zero-rated data for news, and protections against vexatious lawsuits. Execution remains the challenge in a country with a track record of policy implementation gaps. As editorial writer Styli Charalambous notes, 'Journalists’ work forms the bulwark against so many evils that will otherwise go unpunished.' South Africa has the framework to lead developing democracies in sustaining its press, if political will and industry unity prevail.

관련 기사

Media Trust Group executives launching Project Evolution, West Africa's pioneering AI-powered newsroom, amid a high-tech digital newsroom scene.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Media Trust Group unveils Project Evolution, West Africa's first AI-powered newsroom

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

On Wednesday, Media Trust Group, owner of Daily Trust, Weekend Trust, Aminiya, Trust TV and Trust Radio, launched its Digital Newsroom under Project Evolution, described as West Africa's first AI-powered newsroom.

South African news organizations are grappling with the misuse of their content by social media accounts posing as legitimate news sites. Journalists highlight the erosion of ethical standards and call for stronger regulations on digital platforms. The rise of AI-generated content adds further challenges to the industry.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Google has begun a nationwide training program for local publishers as part of its R688-million settlement with South Africa's Competition Commission. The initiative focuses on teaching media outlets to use Google tools in vernacular languages, starting with a workshop in Cape Town. This effort aims to support independent publishers amid digital disruptions in the media sector.

South Africa's Competition Tribunal has ruled on procedural matters in the dominance case against Meta involving GovChat, following three days of pretrial hearings in December 2025. The decisions address evidence disclosure and the scope of intervening parties' arguments ahead of the main trial. These steps aim to ensure transparency while balancing accountability for big tech firms.

AI에 의해 보고됨

게이오 대학 X 디그니티 센터가 AI 시대 뉴스 기관의 핵심 역할을 강조하는 제안을 발표했다. AI 주도의 정보 공간 변화가 민주주의를 위협할 수 있다는 우려 속에서다. 2026년 1월 26일 공개된 이 문서는 미디어의 사회적 책임과 투명성을 재확인할 것을 촉구한다.

Ethiopian media authority officials have released a national report highlighting intensified efforts to curb hate speech and disinformation on social media. The report examines high-engagement content on platforms including Facebook, TikTok, Telegram, X and YouTube. Authorities emphasize ongoing advancements in monitoring and response mechanisms.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) is preparing a multifaceted strategy to counter an expected 'AI disinformation hurricane' ahead of South Africa's 2026 local elections. IEC chairperson Mosotho Moepya highlighted risks from generative AI at a Disinformation Dialogue in Cape Town. Vice-chairperson Janet Love described the threat as 'disinformation on steroids' compared to 2024.

 

 

 

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