Australia’s latest warning to Big Tech may look like a domestic media policy fight. Still, it represents the first major stress test for a new global regulatory blueprint: the Bargain or Be Taxed model. Threatening a 2.25% revenue levy on platforms that refuse to fund local journalism. Eventually, Canberra is shifting from a negotiation-based framework to a direct digital tax mandate.
Moreover, for tech leaders, founders, and investors, the signal is clear: the era of voluntary content ecosystem support is ending. Governments are increasingly viewing digital platforms not just as services, but as critical infrastructure. Henceforth, they must pay a maintenance fee to the information ecosystems they monetize.
The Real Strategic Shift: From Bargaining to a Revenue Mandate
In 2021, Australia’s News Media Bargaining Code was the world’s first successful attempt to force Google and Meta to pay for news content. However, the victory was fragile. Meta eventually signaled it would not renew its deals, and Google sought more favorable terms.
The 2026 proposal, a News Bargaining Incentive, changes the leverage entirely. It is no longer about proving “value” in a boardroom negotiation; it is a statutory ultimatum.
- The 2.25% Lever: Unlike the 2021 code, which relied on the threat of “designation” (a complex legal process). The new draft legislation introduces a flat levy on Australian revenue for platforms earning over A$250 million.
- The Incentive Structure: Companies can avoid the tax by striking direct deals with the government. By offering 150% to 170% offsets against their tax liability for every dollar paid to a publisher.
- Targeting the Agnostic: The tax applies based on revenue size and platform category (Social Media, Search), regardless of whether the platform chooses to host news. This effectively closes the “Meta loophole” of simply banning news to avoid payment.

Why Big Tech and AI Should Care: The Content Liability Expansion
This move marks a fundamental change in how governments define content use. In previous years, the debate was over links and snippets. In the current era of AI Answer Engines and Generative Search, the definition is expanding to include informational benefit.
From Search Power to Content Liability
For companies like Google, the risk isn’t just the cash outlay; it’s the precedent. If Australia successfully taxes a platform’s total revenue to fund a specific sector (news). Eventually, other sectors such as music, book publishing, or even academic research could demand similar sustainability levies.
The AI Licensing Pressure
AI platforms are the silent targets here. While the initial draft names Meta, Google, and TikTok, the framework is designed to be extensible. As Perplexity, OpenAI, and others integrate real-time news to improve grounding and accuracy. Moreover, they face a future where their very existence in a market is contingent on a prepaid Content License Tax.
Global Ripple Effects: Preparing for Regulatory Copycats
Australia has historically served as a regulatory laboratory. What starts in Canberra often moves to Ottawa, Brussels, and eventually Washington.
- Canada: Following the Online News Act (C-18), Canada saw Meta pull news entirely. Suppose Australia’s revenue tax proves effective at bringing Meta back to the table. Surely, expect Ottawa to amend its legislation to mirror the revenue-levy model by 2027.
- The European Union: With the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and AI Act already in force, the EU is looking for more direct ways to fund “sovereign media.” A 2.25% revenue tax is a much simpler mechanism to enforce than the current Neighboring Rights negotiations, which have been bogged down in French and German courts.
- The United States: While federal legislation, like the JCPA, has stalled, state-level moves in California and elsewhere are gaining momentum. A success story in Australia provides the political cover needed for U.S. lawmakers to move from antitrust rhetoric to fiscal policy.
Strategic Takeaway: Navigating the Information Economy
For tech professionals and operators, this isn’t just about Australia; it’s about a permanent shift in the cost of doing business. A Managed Information Economy is replacing the ‘free rider’ era of the web.
1. Shift from ”Bargaining” to ”Licensing”
Founders of AI and content-aggregator startups should no longer build models assuming fair use will cover them. The Australian model suggests that use is being redefined as presence in the market. Building a licensing reserve into the unit economics is now a strategic necessity.
2. Regulatory Forecasting as a Core Competency
Companies must move beyond legal compliance to regulatory forecasting. If a platform reaches the A$250M revenue threshold in a Tier-2 market. As a result, the Australian Tax is now a likely line item in the 3-year projection.
3. The ”Decoupling” Risk
Platforms must weigh the cost of the tax against the cost of withdrawal. Meta’s previous news ban was a bluff that Australia is now calling with a revenue-based tax. Tech leaders must decide whether they are willing to be “taxed on existence” or to decouple their services from aggressive regulatory jurisdictions physically.
Strategic Insight: Australia is no longer asking for a seat at the table; they are sending a bill for the room. For Big Tech and AI, the choice is no longer whether they pay for the information ecosystem. But how, via a structured commercial deal or a blunt government levy?

