CNN said it has restricted access to its Facebook FB -3.66% pages in Australia following a ruling from that country’s high court that makes news organizations legally liable for comments on their Facebook posts.

Facebook users in Australia will no longer have access to major pages run by the network, including its primary Facebook page, its CNN International page and pages dedicated to its shows, a CNN spokeswoman said.

CNN, a unit of AT&T Inc.’s WarnerMedia, appears to be the first major U.S. media organization to publicly restrict Australian access to its Facebook pages in the wake of a ruling earlier this month from the High Court of Australia that made news organizations legally liable for comments on their Facebook pages.

The court ruled that media companies facilitated and encouraged comments from users by creating public Facebook pages and posting content on them. According to the court, media companies are responsible for any defamatory content that appears on them because they are considered publishers of the comments.

In the wake of that ruling, CNN asked Facebook whether it would consider helping news organizations disable comments on all of their pages in Australia to avoid potential legal risks, according to a person close to CNN. Facebook declined to disable all comments on CNN’s pages in Australia and instead offered to help CNN disable comments on its posts one-by-one, the person said.

Ultimately, CNN concluded that managing comments on posts from each of its accounts was too time-consuming and instead opted to restrict access to its pages in the country, the person said. CNN executives believe that Facebook should be responsible for helping publishers comply with laws that apply to content on its platform, the person said.

“We are disappointed that Facebook, once again, has failed to ensure its platform is a place for credible journalism and productive dialogue around current events among its users,” the CNN spokeswoman said in a statement. “CNN will, of course, continue to publish content on our own platforms in Australia and to deliver quality journalism to our audiences around the world.”

A person close to Facebook said the social network never ruled out providing additional moderation tools in its discussion with CNN.

In a statement, Facebook said it supported the reform of Australia’s defamation laws and said it provided CNN with features to manage comments.

“We continue to provide Australians a destination for quality journalism, including through Facebook News which we launched in August,” Facebook said.

A relatively small fraction of CNN’s total online audience comes from Australia. According to measurement firm Comscore, less than 2 million of the company’s 166 million unique users globally in August originated in Australia. CNN’s website remains accessible in the country—just not the major CNN Facebook pages promoting its articles.

AT&T earlier this year agreed to spin off CNN parent WarnerMedia and merge that business with Discovery Inc.

Write to Benjamin Mullin at [email protected]

Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

This post first appeared on wsj.com

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