Australia Will Force Google and Facebook to Pay for News Content (nzherald.co.nz) 149
"Social media giants Facebook and Google will be forced to pay Australian media companies for sharing their content or face sanctions under a landmark decision..." reports the New Zealand Herald:
The move comes as the media industry reels from tumbling advertising revenue, already in decline before the Covid 19 coronavirus outbreak collapsed the market. Australia will become the first government to impose a legal regime including financial penalties for digital platforms that profit from content produced by the news media.
The federal Government has instructed competition watchdog, the ACCC, to develop a mandatory code of conduct for the digital giants to adhere to. Writing in the Australian newspaper this morning, treasurer Josh Frydenberg said it was "only fair" that the search engines and social media giants pay for the original news content that they use to drive traffic to their sites.
The federal Government has instructed competition watchdog, the ACCC, to develop a mandatory code of conduct for the digital giants to adhere to. Writing in the Australian newspaper this morning, treasurer Josh Frydenberg said it was "only fair" that the search engines and social media giants pay for the original news content that they use to drive traffic to their sites.
How about instead (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
People die of exposure (Score:4, Interesting)
[How about instead] these media companies pay Google and Facebook for the the exposure that drives traffic to their sites?.
Ah, yes, the "exposure" argument! "Do work for free, you'll get exposure! [theoatmeal.com]
Exposure? You know what, people die of exposure. You want to eat, you'd better want to be paid.
Newspapers are dying because nobody wants to pay for journalism. Because companies like Google want to take it and use it for free.
Greedy arrogant bastards, and for once in my life I'm not talking about Google or Facebook.
You should be. Why in the world do you think Google's taking other peoples' work and spreading it for their profit is anything other than greed?
Re: (Score:2)
Newspapers are dying because nobody wants to pay for partisan attacks.
FTFY...
Re: (Score:2)
The reality, nobody is interested in bullshit corporate propaganda masquerading as news any more and flooded with advertisements, that;s the news itself and not just the many commercial breaks in-between. Not to forget streaming, nobody ain't watching news when they be watching netflix. For me between the ABC https://www.abc.net.au/news/ [abc.net.au] (for local) and RT https://www.rt.com/ [rt.com] (for international), I am done and the other for profit news services in Australia a pretty crap, straight up corporate propaganda an
Re: (Score:3)
Because companies like Google want to take it and use it for free.
If your entire journalistic benefit can be summed up in a single sentence on a Google Now card then your death is probably for the benefit of society. Newspapers are dying because their journalistic benefit is worthless. There are plenty of news organisations doing well and users even paying a subscription fee to read their content.
Your "exposure" rant is completely off base when it comes to actual publicising and advertisement that directly brings people to your site with a single click.
Why in the world do you think Google's taking other peoples' work
If they were doing
Re: How about instead (Score:2)
Shouldn't the media companies have the option of being paid for their content that Google and Facebook scrape and aggregate? After all, if the media companies think the exposure is so valuable, they can always decide to charge Google and Facebook zero for it. It's pretty telling that they seem willing to give up the "valuable exposure".
Re: (Score:3)
They do.
And google will pay for content if it gives them a significant edge over other search engines.
If those sites would provide a "google news" API that they were charging google for that delivered a business value for google they might have luck with it.
Addtionally, if they have substantial original content Google will enter into negotiations. If they are mostly republished wire service feeds that google already subscribes to there isn't much value beyond knowing what news is trending.
I suspect the prob
Re: (Score:3)
Re: How about instead (Score:2)
If I was google, I'd just remove them from the index, and then turn around and demand the law be revoked and damages paid before reindexing them. Google isn't a government entity and is under no obligation to index or return anything to anyone. They are a private for-profit entity, helpin
Re: How about instead (Score:5, Informative)
In Germany, VG Wort lobbied the Bundestag, until the Bundestag made a new law allowing news outlets to ask for payments from News aggregators. Some small News aggregators went backrupt, and Google News only listed news outlets which weren't asking for payments. VG Wort sued Google News for abusing their monopolistic power, after all other News aggregators ceased to exist, and lost in court. As of now, the law is technically still in place. VG Wort has paid 4 mio Euros in ligitation costs, didn't get a single cent from any news aggregator as payments, and no News outlet in Germany requires Google News to pay to be allowed to list them.
Do you think, Australian newspapers will experence anything else?
Re: (Score:2)
Newspapers are struggling to find a way to get paid in an era when anything they published can be easily copy/pasted for free and many people just rely on news digests from aggregation or social media.
They have tried all sorts of stuff. Some have paywalls, unless you follow a link from Twitter/Facebook because they want people to keep sharing their content. Some are now just donation funded like The Guardian, which seems to work well for them but isn't viable for smaller outfits.
Subscriptions and paywalls o
Re: (Score:2)
Re: How about instead (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There are tons of news portals that link to stories at journalist and news sites. Pick one, these are designed as your landing pads.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: How about instead (Score:2)
Looks like Russian-UK moderators got mod points today. Good on you. Let's mark the tousand year calendar! :D :P
I don't see why anyone would pay (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't see why anyone would pay for what passes for news nowadays. It's basically opinions, and not even of the journalists' own, but the opinions of the owners. Why would anyone pay for that?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
When scrolling through a spammy news article, it stutters and stops, and rearranges as ads fill in. I can't tell if this is bloatware by the incompetent, or deliberate to get me to mis-click on an ad jumping around.
Why pay, when I'm giving it away for free? (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They still lie by omission. You can lie simply by reporting things that align with your agenda and not reporting on things that do not. Or omitting facts in what you report. Lower IQ readership won't even see anything wrong.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: I don't see why anyone would pay (Score:3)
There are more good news sources now than in anytime in history. The problem is that there are also more garbage news sources than anytime in history and they are the most read and watched.
Most people do not seek out good news sources because nuanced and discerning information is, to most people, boring. Conspiracy theories are exciting.
Re: (Score:2)
Try Reuters and AP if you want really dry, factual news. Those guys are paid by newspapers and TV news to provide unbiased stories that they can put their own spin on, but you can just go to their sites and read them directly.
Other good sources of mostly unbiased news are the BBC (somewhat right wing bias these days), The Guardian (neutral, perhaps slightly left if you think treating migrants as human beings is leftist), NHK (a little bit too respectful sometimes but rarely biased), and the Financial Times
So.... (Score:2)
Google just won't give them any exposure at ... getting Australian News in Australia will become much more difficult
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
If a news story posts in Australia, and nobody on Google or Facebook hears it, does it make a sound?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Google has inked deals with the Wire services.
Re: (Score:2)
NOTE: I'm being generous and assuming their search engine sucks; it could be they simply cook their own results to protect their own political interests...
I don't see how the latter would simply be one cause of the former. They certainly aren't mutually-exclusive options.
Re: (Score:2)
... would simply not be...
Re: (Score:2)
I have NEVER used Google or Facebook for news. I have my news sites bookmarked.
And for most of my searches these days I use DuckDuckGo, not Google.
Re:So.... (Score:4, Informative)
Based on my readings of what happened in Spain, when Google left the news market there was a slight uptick in revenue for the newspapers. Small, just a few percent or so. So the newspaper sites simply kept their core readers, who they already had, core readers who read enough to pay for a subscription. What disappeared is millions of casual views. The kind of viewing where a region has a hot story which attracts non-core readers to click on it. This type of viewing simply disappeared.
I have not seen any studies on this, but I suspect the net result of this was many people who casually read the news simply stopped reading any news. Or these people transitioned to foreign news sources. What certainly did not happen was a significant increase in revenue for the Spanish press. The revenue Google was collecting seems to have evaporated instead of transfering over to the news providers.
On the US side I have almost stopped using Google news. I used to use it a lot, but now nine out of ten clicks on a headline simply takes me to a paywall at a random newspaper which I have zero interest in subscribing too. So I am falling into the same pattern observed in Spain, I 'm not reading news online anymore. It is just too annoying to click on dozens of links searching for one that will actually show the story. There is plenty of other free content on the Internet, I just read that instead of the newspaper sites. I run through over 500 articles a day on my RSS feed.
Re: (Score:2)
I haven’t used Google News in a very long time, but I used to love it. It provided good information density, a variety of (non syndicated) stories and sources, and could be easily customized.
Now I subscribe to three papers, and will likely need to add a fourth. (I can afford to do this now, so my primary disincentive had been the stupid “promo” gimmicks they played, switching from too cheap to too expensive rates, never simply offering a reasonable rate and sticking with it.) I hate most
Re: (Score:2)
Install the uBlock Origin adblocker. Their latest version includes a button to disable javascript. That eliminates the pesky paywalls which simply hide the article text or remove your ability to scroll (NY Times, LA Times, WaPo, etc). The only paywalls which remain are those that requir
Re: (Score:2)
www.abc.net.au/news
Bookmark it. It's not that difficult. All the other "media" websites present tabloid headlines, ads, quizzes, and horoscopes.
But if this goes ahead, how about removing the "opening page" link of MS Edge - it goes to https://www.msn.com/en-au/ [msn.com] which is full of links to the daily fail. Should MSN pay the daily fail for linking to their articles?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, that's what happened last time. Perhaps it will be different this time. (I believe it was France last time.)
Lack of technical knowledge? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
You're heading in the wrong direction. There not talking about limiting access. It's not necessary to use a VPN to access any Australian media website.
What would be the long-term effect? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not sure what you think Geoblocking has to do with anything. If people are truly desperate for a headline they'll just go to a news site rather than firing up a VPN for the sole purpose of being able to read the summary sentence.
Simple solution really (Score:2)
They try to fine Google for displaying search and news, Google just simply black holes them. If people search for the site, according to google search results it doesn't exist. Advertising on the web for their sites also gets dropped. Wouldn't want to accidentally display something from the site without permission after all...
Let's see them whine when traffic really tanks.
Re: (Score:3)
Politicians lie (Score:2)
"It's only fair that..." [Google pay for content that... um... drives people... to the content providers.]
No, what's fair is that stupid politicians who lie (including our own) should sit down, be quiet, listen to experts in the field -- not lobbyists -- and quit passing stupid edicts which have the situation back-assward.
GOOGLE does these papers a favor. It takes a small headline or snippet and drives traffic DIRECTLY to the source.
The papers do no favors to anyone. Whether they have a paywall or are jus
Re: (Score:2, Redundant)
"It's only fair that..." [Google pay for content that... um... drives people... to the content providers.]
No, what's fair is that stupid politicians who lie (including our own) should sit down, be quiet, listen to experts in the field -- not lobbyists -- and quit passing stupid edicts which have the situation back-assward.
While I agree with your sentiment I disagree with your target. These politicians wouldn't be doing anything if the news corporations weren't making demands. So blame the corporations, not the politicians, they're the ones who are really behind this kind of obstructionist protectionism.
Every corporation loves to shout about free markets and less regulations, until those free markets turn against them and suddenly those regulations look really nice.
Re: (Score:3)
So blame the corporations, not the politicians
No, blame the politicians. The politicians control the system that gives corporate lobbyists disproportionate power.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I blame the voters who elected those stupid, greedy motherfuckers and are too docile to pitchfork their asses out of office.
Part of the problem is that they've got the election systems so rigged that it would take literal pitchforks.
Another is that they're very adept at heading off the formation crowds with the pitchforks and incarcerating their organizers.
Re: (Score:2)
So, no, the world will not collapse unless we allow American companies to pillage us.
Simple misdirection... (Score:2)
With the entire original quote to view, it is obvious that the final "their" refers to the news content sites, rather than the social media giants' sites.
Not the first government (Score:3)
The Spanish government passed a similar law back in 2014, so that if Google wanted to show news in its platform it would have to pay the content providers. Google News is now shut down in Spain, either as a result, or to avoid setting a precedent for other countries.
Mandatory Code (Score:2)
Google and Facebook will be forced to link to media companies as well as paying them. They will not be allowed to simply blacklist them.
"The mandatory code would force the tech companies to pay for the content they siphon from news media companies, share their consumer data and be subject to rules on the rankings of news on their platforms, the Australian reported."
Re: (Score:2)
Assuming Google doesn't just stop doing Australian news. As someone else above mentioned, Spain tried this and Google pulled out. Since I'm not in Spain I've no idea how this helped or hindered the process of getting eyeballs to read the news.
I tend to visit bbc.com and news.yahoo.com regularly and during lunch breaks I sometimes will go down the google suggestions which kicks back quite a decent amount of variety. I'll actually go to cnn.com and fox.com specifically because I found a link on google that I
Re: Mandatory Code (Score:2)
For me, the rule is simple.
If it is not paid directly by its readers, and *only* by them, it is not independent. It is following whatever the advertisers want. YouTube is proof of this, if there ever was any.
If it is not independent, it cannot be trusted. It ia fake news.
If it is directly paid by its readers, it might still be fake news, but at least we can be aware of being in a circle jerk. Even when most will never. As Reddit proves.
And if it is openly biased (As opposed to secretly biased, aka "the trut
Re: (Score:2)
Google et al won't be forced to do anything. They'll either comply with a code of conduct, or they'll choose to cease operations in Australia. It won't stop https://www.google.com.au/ [google.com.au] simply being redirected to https://www.google.com/ [google.com] where they can link to whoever they want. Then, Australians will ask the govt why searches are taking longer (because no local caches). And that will leave the market open for a new Australian search engine. We've had a couple in the past, but google simply steamrolled over th
Re: (Score:2)
>>>They will not be allowed to simply blacklist them.
HHAHAHAHA. Good joke.
Re: (Score:2)
So, now, you are effectively forcing them to do the bidding of the Australian media companies, and stealing their assets is perfectly OK as long as that is accomplished?
Yes, governments can do that. No, it's not okay (Score:2)
I don't think GP said it's "perfectly okay", just that power-hungry politicians can do those things. They can.
Even in the US, traditionally a culture that places high value on freedom and being able to make your own choices, a significant percentage of the population supports politicians who want to take your life savings. You sacrificed and saved, their supporters didn't, and that's "not fair" they say. Government should forcibly take from the savers and hand your savings to the spenders. No that's not
Re: (Score:2)
"Nationalized"?
You're fantasizing. We don't do that sort of thing here. Where do you live where that's a likely possibility?
In any case, their principal assets are banks of servers with local caches of data, and a domain name. The hardware is a trifle compared to their worldwide assets, so that's no loss.
The domain registrar isn't an Australian entity, so the govt can't seize it without going through the usual process, and I doubt that would be successful. The Australian govt simply doesn't have the leverag
pay to google (Score:1)
No, it won't (Score:2)
"Australia Will Force Google and Facebook to Pay for News Content " ...that they actually put on their page, which will be 0 (zero).
Linking? (Score:2)
Or actually scraping news from these sites? Because there's a big difference. Using Google/Facebook as news aggregators with links is one of the primary methods that people use to find the originating site. Without that, your site loses much of its traffic. On the other hand, scraping content is ass-hattery.
One thing that news outlets are going to have to come to terms with: People are increasingly unwilling to dig through daily fluff pieces about the local ladies book club to find the stories that interes
Opinion (Score:3)
The president of the News Media Alliance recently penned this opinion. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/0... [nytimes.com]
Re: (Score:3)
Couldn't you have just copied the text of that article into your post?
Re: (Score:2)
Couldn't you have just copied the text of that article into your post?
What you think he's Google or something?
to hell with google (Score:2)
Seems fair (Score:3, Insightful)
Google and FB both use someone else's work to make money. There's no reason they can't pay that someone who created that work.
This is no different than people on here howling how neither Google or FB should be able to use someone's personal information to make money or that they should pay that person for that data.
After all, it's not their data being used. It's someone else's data.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There's a weekly that lists local restaurants, reviews of them, their current menu and specials. Should that weekly have to pay restaurants a fee for each person who eats at that restaurant based on the reviews and information found in the weekly?
Re: (Score:2)
And in what way is Google giving out the content of the articles? All they give when I look at the site is the headline and part of the first sentence of the article. That's hardly equivalent to the entire article (or your notional free meal). Your entire objection here is based on a straw man you've created that bears no resemblance to reality.
And you still didn't answer the question as stated, which I take as an admission that you can't answer it in any way that doesn't fatally undermine your own position
Re: (Score:2)
All productivity-generating business transactions result in both sides making money. Hence the saying that business is not a zero-sum game.
Re: (Score:2)
Google and FB both use someone else's work to make money. There's no reason they can't pay that someone who created that work.
Copyright cases the world over have shown time and time again that no they do not use "someone else's work", and it has nothing to do with personal information which is something not covered under copyright and doesn't result in your direct salary being affected by Google.
Conflating the two issues shows a clear lack of understanding of one or both of them.
After all, it's not their data being used. It's someone else's data.
I just copied the data you made, and no I'm not giving you shit for it. ... Well actually ... I am giving you shit for it. In fact I'm giving you shit for
Re: (Score:2)
It might work if Google just gave them a percentage, the problem is who gets to decide the percentage? The newspapers have an idea of what they think their content is worth, Google knows how much ad revenue it makes from News. If there was an independent body that could arbitrate it might just work, but the newspapers want to set their own rates which is basically suicide.
A very good explainer for why this won't help (Score:4, Interesting)
https://baekdal.com/trends/wha... [baekdal.com]
In short:
The main point is that a lot of the ad money is now spent on non-media, and no amount of reducing the influence/power of Google and Facebook is going to change that.
Re: (Score:2)
I guess the question is if the media sources themselves are able to do something about this. Are they just slow to figure it out or is there actually no real solution? Without subscriber profiles (or some involuntary tracking) I'm not sure they'll be able to provide advertisers with what they want and can get so easily from Google or Facebook. There is a limited market and now most of it is flowing to the aggergators. So do we accept all of this as if and just let the media sources die because they're on th
Re: (Score:2)
I fully agree with everything you wrote, and the author of that article also mentions this. However, I think that trend of getting more click-bait as news will only accelerate if news organisations will get remuneration from Google and Facebook, since that most likely will also be based on clicks, likes and views. And that in turn will make it even harder for the actual quality outlets, or quality journalists within larger organisations, to thrive or even survive.
I see the solution more in the direction of
Re: (Score:2)
This is why, living in Australia, I am so hugely appreciative of the ABC. It gets plenty of criticism from some corners but for me it is a brilliant source of reliable news and it's one of the most trusted institutions we have in this country. Now more than ever it looks like the use of taxpayer money for a media organisation is completely justified. It's just one part of the puzzle but it means I can happily ignore the Newscorp drivel that for so long used to be all we had.
This will fail spectacularly... (Score:2)
corrected headline (Score:2)
"Australia Will Force Google and Facebook to Pay for News Content..." ...for the first week or so, then when Google and FB's delinking algorithms have a had a chance to implement, when suddenly no Australian media organization is linked in any google search (even local ones), then they won't be paying anything.
Who wins this, again?
Other than FB/Goog, who else pays? (Score:2)
Will all of these, including the small search engines have to pay? [webalive.com.au]
Spain 'em (Score:2)
Why doesn't Google (and Facebook) do what they did in Spain? Just delist them. Each goes their own way and nobody loses, so everyone wins.
SUE (Score:2)
They should counter-sue and then the newspapers should counter-sue and they should all appeal as many times as possible.
Hopefully they'll all go bust, looks like a win-win situation to me.
Google did it wrong (Score:3)
What they should've done is offered to include news organizations' content on Google News for a nominal fee. A gentle reminder that they're doing the news services a favor by providing this service. The stubborn big-name news organizations stuck in the past would've refused to participate both on principle and because of pride. Smaller up and coming and modern news organizations would've recognized the opportunity having your article show up on Google News represented, and gladly paid. And after a few years the smaller news organizations would've become big, and the stubborn big-name news organizations would've become small.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There has never been a better time to say NO to the USA.
With the world shut down, its time to find new sources and remove the dominance of the USA. For most countries the USA is NOT their biggest trading partner anyway. So make US corporations pay taxes, make them pay for what they take (data), Make them accountable for data breaches, etc etc etc.
Make Australia Great Again, Australia First , etc etc etc.
Re: (Score:2)
What consequences will there be for the USA? It's the Australian sites that'll be seeing traffic to them dry up and their viewership numbers plummet. Google won't really see any effect, Australian news sites make up a small percentage of their listings and Google users probably won't notice the change unless they happen to be Australian themselves. And other than purely local news the stories from the Australian news sites will probably be available through multiple non-Australian news sites as well, and fr
Re: (Score:2)
The US and US corporations do NOT get to dictate to the rest of the world.
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, I hope they do. You see, they (and you) haven't thought through the consequences all the way. If Google should pay the news sites because Google has nothing to list without them, then what do the news sites have for content if not for the people and companies they write about? By that same logic every single person, every single organization, every single company that appears in a story on a news site is entitled to be paid by that news site for that news site's use of their information and name and ima
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)