![Facebook says it will pay $1.3b over three years to news media](/pf/resources/images/placeholders/placeholder_l.png?d=793)
Facebook says it will pay $1.3b over three years to news media
The tech giant's announcement comes after it lifted a controversial news ban in Australia.
The tech giant's announcement comes after it lifted a controversial news ban in Australia.
Company says it will replace 150 of those lose in "deduplication" exercise.
Top-tier rugby countries included for the first time.
Digital capacity is vital to rangatahi. Made with funding from NZ On Air.
But full-year guidance nudged up, total cost of pandemic now less than expected.
The plot thickens, again, for the owner of Orcon, Slingshot and Flip.
New broadband option is bound to tempt some users.
One cost looms larger than all others as Sky looks to slice costs and stabilise revenue.
Ban set to be lifted less than a week after making the shock decision.
New York Times: Kremlin hasn't displaced Western apps. Instead it turns to intimidation.
UFB operator accuses mobile telcos of underhand selling tactics.
The rise of the big platforms has led to a whole host of digital harms.
UFB fibre operator guides to lower end of full-year forecast. Expenses rise.
It may not be the market leader for food delivery - but it has aspirations to be.
NZ-developed tech using "synthetic paint" may offer low-cost test for Covid-19 immunity.
China has tightened online lending rules.
Technology can go head-to-head with UFB fibre in many situations.
Facebook has show why governments need to come down on it like a ton of bricks.
Trade Me has reached a conditional agreement to acquire the business.
Facebook has banned the sharing of Australian news content on the platform.
And there's a million-dollar bounty if you can beat it.
Financial Time: Employee claims company overstated how many users advertisers could reach.
Man reveals the sneaky tactic he uses to park for free around the city and avoid fines.
Those administering the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccination shots will be first to receive them.
Editorial: Social network oversteps the mark by banning news links.
Massive inoculation programme will begin with an "interim" solution; glitches expected.
Sensitive files made public - all from the file-sharing service used b the RBNZ.
German police are using a controversial strategy to ensnare abusers.
Facebook calls Australia's bluff over regulation - and sparks a global firestorm.
New York Times: Google striking deals of its own with media companies.