Newspapers Reconsidering Google News 172
News.com ran an article earlier in the week talking about the somewhat strained relationship between newspapers and Google. Google's stance is firm: 'We don't pay to index news content.' Just the same, newspapers with an online presence are starting to reconsider their relationship with Google, the value of linking, and the realities of internet economics. Talk of paying for content, as well as ongoing court cases, has observers considering both sides of the issue: "While some in newspaper circles point to the Belgium court ruling and the content deals with AP and AFP as a sign Google may be willing to pay for content, Google fans and bloggers interpreted the news quite differently. To them, it was obvious that the Belgium group had agreed to settle--even after winning its court case--because they discovered that they needed Google's traffic more than the fees that could be generated from news snippets. Observers note that with newspapers receiving about 25 percent of their traffic from search engines, losing Google's traffic had to sting."
Not a big concern. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a big concern. (Score:5, Insightful)
Kinda makes you wonder about the "journalism is hard" comment in the article.
Re:Not a big concern. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not a big concern. (Score:4, Funny)
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It's getting better though. The problem is that people will turn to news aggregators before the problem fixes itself, I fear.
I know it's largely a problem of matter of perspective but I view the news aggregators as forcing news sources to improve the quality of their material. If you have the best material you'll likely be on the front page at the news aggregator site/feed. If I like your material enough I may just RSS feed your news stories to my personal aggregator or my Google home page. I may even give up the news aggregators (google news) and just come straight to you. However, I would've never found you without the agg
Re:Not a big concern. (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh I'm sure that real journalism is quite hard. There's just not very many real journalists.
"Wall Street Journal" is the right model. (Score:5, Informative)
However, Google has no legal obligation to do so. Google is not causing the newspapers to lose money. Google is just a pointer to the news. The news organizations are the ones who actually provide the news -- for free.
So, the solution is obvious. The "Wall Street Journal" (WSJ) has already implemented the solution: charge for news. The readership of the WSJ has declined little since the start of the Internet Age. Revenue has also been relatively stable.
Now, look at the "Los Angeles Times". Every bit of news and opinion at the "Times" is free. Why would anyone subscribe to the "Times" when she can get the news for free?
Re:"Wall Street Journal" is the right model. (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, look at the "Los Angeles Times". Every bit of news and opinion at the "Times" is free. Why would anyone subscribe to the "Times" when she can get the news for free?
Bingo. I think you've also touched, indirectly, on the bigger issue: original content. If you don't have any original content, then you can't well charge admission! Papers that basically just re-run the same wire service reports as everyone else, can't adopt the WSJ's business model, because there are lots of other, cheaper (free) sources for the same thing.
What we are about to see, is a big contraction in the newspaper market. Honestly I don't think this is a bad thing. It's been a long time in coming. Most newspapers -- and I'm not talking about the LA Times here (I don't have a clue about them) -- have long been a 'news dissemination' service, and not a real 'news reporting' service. They don't really make any content themselves, beyond pretty basic local stuff that a smart highschool Junior could write up. Everything else is just wire service stuff. These are the papers that aren't going to make it, or are going to have to radically change shape in order to survive.
The Internet makes the dissemination of information relatively cheap and easy. What it doesn't do is change the cost of creating the material originally (well, in some cases it might, but not as dramatically as it affects the distribution side). If you're nothing but an information distributor, you're in trouble. But if you're an information creator, then you still have something you can market.
Everyone talks about newspapers going under, but you never hear anyone (seriously) talking about the AP or UPI going under. They're not going to, and neither are the big papers that actually do some serious reporting and content-creation -- although they might have to become more like wire services themselves, less "newspapers" and more 'information brokers' or 'content assemblers' (taking lots of raw data and presenting it in a format that people find pleasing and useful, and are incidentally willing to pay for).
There's no shortage of demand for news, and that means there's always going to be money for the people who are really in the core of the business. It's the ancillary stuff that's going to go down, and well it should.
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UPI went bankrupt years ago and has changed hands several times. The company that now owns the UPI brand actually is an agent of the Unification Church (also known as "the Moonies"). Hardly any newspapers use UPI these days.
The Associated Press is a cooperative owned and controlled by American newspapers. The AP has gone through a massive restructuring over the last several years as it
Information overload (Score:2)
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Even in that area these regional newspapers, like the times, are under attack by an ever increasing number of smaller local publications that specialize in quality local reporting only to the exclusion of national content for precisely the reasons that you and the grandparent state, there is little no money in simply reprinting the AP an
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My friend has an online account to the Economist, and offered me his username/password. I love the Economist, and chose to subscribe to the print edition. Why? Not for moral reasons (that's a nice side effect), but because I like to read the newspaper in print. I don't want to stare at a computer more than I have to, and it's much harder t
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Try RSS - I look through far more than 50 articles a day, but only have to read in-depth those that catch my attention. The benefit of a good RSS reader (I use Vienna) being that articles are only listed in one place (not dynamically all over the page like some newspaper sites) and you know what you've looked at (by changing the article status to read - eg like email).
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Whether (or how) the online presence of newspapers generates profits is the subject of the article. It's a separate and distinct issue from the declining revenues of newspapers, which, for the most part, are a decline in classifieds revenue. Declining circulations play a role, but to a far less extent than you'd like to believe. Newspapers are still very v
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What democracy? Seriously.
The prevalent form of government 'enjoyed' in the 'western world' is not democracy -- it is 'mediacracy'.
And mediacracy is all about appropriately informing the electorate -- informing them in such a way that when it comes time to spend their 'hard-earned' vote they are subject to exactly the same sorts of influences which work so well when it comes to advertising any
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Re:"Wall Street Journal" is the right model. (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not like Magic Stupid Rays get emitted straight from the Internet and into your brain, despite what the BBC may say.
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Apparently you haven't seen the ads in the sports section...
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I think you are.
In twenty years, e-paper will have taken over, today models are not bad - Sony's and IRex's. Just n
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Now, look at the "Los Angeles Times". Every bit of news and opinion at the "Times" is free. Why would anyone subscribe to the "Times" when she can get the news for free?
The LA Times is notorious here for telemarketing. For years we've had to put up with repeated sales calls offering us "great deals" on that horrid rag, and no argument short of hanging up would get the tenacious phone-mill slave off your phone. Until now, that is. When you tell them "I read it online, for free", they simply have no answer beyond "Oh....OK....thank you for your time". Victory at last.
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In any case, the pure subscription model is on it's way out. USA Today has a larger subscription bas
Don't be silly (Score:2)
Now, look at the "Los Angeles Times". Every bit of news and opinion at the "Times" is free. Why would anyone subscribe to the "Times" when she can get the news for free?"
Why would you subscribe to anything when you can get the news for free.
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On the contrary I think that stories that have put in their own research/spin can be easily identified by scrolling through google's list of snipets. Why do you think content producers both love and hate google?
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They need to compete with google head on, other wise via search, google will always has head start over them when it comes to gaining the readers eyes. The also do not want to mention their compe
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First off, here is the correct link Volkischer Beobachter [wikipedia.org]. It should be noted that that particular paper was the newspaper of the National Socialist German Workers' Party, i.e. the Nazi party, whilst Al-Jazeera isn't and has never been related to either the Baath Party in Iraq, or Al-Qa'ida.
Al-Jazeera is a Doha based organisation, Doha being the capital of Qatar, and Qatar being an apparently key US ally in the middle east, along with Saudi Arabia. It tends to carry news aimed at middle eastern readers/
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Well I *suppose* that if Al Jazeera journalists were to see US troops smearing pig fat on their bullets to, er, protect them from 'rust'... and they reported this... then this may be seen by some as 'encouraging attacks on US troops'...
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Well looks like you have made your mind up already that Al-Jazeera == Al-Qa'ida. What I find strange is that the US administration and the UK government haven't actually claimed that Al-Jazeera are involved in t
Oh, the Ant iUSian bullshit again. (Score:2)
If your illiterate President would have listened to the "anti Americans" many innocent lifes would have been spared and terrorism would have not worsened all around the world (the dumbsters Blair and Aznar made targets of their countries for blindly not being anti American. The other friend of the US, Silvio Berlusconni, enacted laws to avoid legal prosecuttion while still in office, th
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No, I just think that China would be improved if it had free elections. And all those Islamic countries would be improved if they had a culture which respected the rights of people other than rich, straight men - probably expecting a Jeffersonian democracy there is wishful thinking at this point. More to the point, not only would these c
Do no evil, despite a monopoly? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not being listed in Google means that your competitor gets all the hits you might have gotten.
Can you then dare to stand up against Google? What if Google decides to take the stance of "play by our rules or we'll make sure nobody finds you anymore"?
Not really a comforting thought, when someone can dictate how the internet has to run...
If a tree falls, but Google doesn't index it... (Score:2, Interesting)
If a webpage is published online, and Google doesn't index it, does it still get found?
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But overall, I'd guess the hit would be considerable. Unless of course it becomes public enough that Google doesn't want you to see X's page, 'cause then pretty much every media outlet will cover the story
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I can't tell you if it made a sound, but I bet I could find it with Google maps.
Think about what you are saying. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Think about what you are saying. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hm, what a black-white stance. Oh wait, I get it, it's because of the slogan, right?
Heh. Kids. When will you grow up.
Google is so huge right now, you'll find people with all sorts of agenda inside. And the funny things is, many of them, at all levels, worked at Microsoft at some point. Some of them worked in Apple. Some of the people in Apple worked in Google. Some of the people in Microsoft worked in Apple or Google.
A corporation has no face. But, if it makes you feel better, you can keep putting faces on it. It makes it all so much simpler...
Corporations DO have faces and souls (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, as to the ppl at Google coming from MS, yes, some did. Hell, some of them came from Iraq. How much influence do any of them have? NOT MUCH. The do no evil is a top down mandate. Likewise, the MS approach to win at all costs is a top down approach. That is why e-mail gets "lost". Likewise, you see MS slaes throw their weight around (still) by telling re-sellers that they will do what MS wants. MS also tells politicians that if they bring in Linux or OO, that the next policitian will be from the opposite party. That is EVIL.
Does Google do any of that? Nope. Not at this time. But if the top execs change (or perhops does not change), then they will slowly become "evil".
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Heh. Kids. When will you grow up."
They did kid, which is why they don't just accept your spin.
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And second, how about you not enjoying the idea of Google keeping your outdated pages in Cache?
I'm sure, with a bit of pondering, one could come up with a few more reasons why they might not enjoy Google, and sue.
And I'd really love to hear how you'd plan to "topple" Google, should the need arise. I don't trust Google. But then, I don't trust any company that has a de facto mon
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As to them having my data in cache, great. I say go for it. It means that it is one more way to reach my site. Likewise, they can use my content if it brings me more users. That is the name of the game, right? The funny thing is that most businesses and content developers would gladly give access to content if it brought them more customers.
So, you want to topple Google? Well, it is possible to do right
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Robots.txt
LoL *chuckle*... Everytime someone comes up with that "the search engine is stealing my content" thing I cant help but laugh really hard... this "web page" content stealing is akin to someone paying $10,000 to put one of these huge ads panels in the street containing their "content" and then bitching because people *can* see it.
If you do not want your content to be se
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With respect, I think that's short-sighted. While MS has done some shitty things
What concerns me is that Google has far more potential to do "evil" now than MS. I fear that. Now, while this might sound alarmist, history suggests otherwise.
When everything is b
Actually, history is on my side (Score:2)
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Are you running MS? (Score:2)
So with the above in mind, who exactly are you using f
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Microsoft, Yahoo, Ask.com, etc, do not at this time do this - in fact Google is the ONLY search engine going out of its way to associate every single user with enough informa
Re:Do no evil, despite a monopoly? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the reason why I do believe it'll be nice to see Yahoo and Microsoft work (or merge?) together better, so they can compete better against Google.
I do use Google today, it has the best search results, undeniably. But it also has a huge market share, which makes content producers very nervous, for a good reason.
Google may delist you overnight, after an algorithm tweak, for something completely innocent, and not SEO related at all, that you did on your site. It's unavoidable, even if Google was run by shiny white angels with halo above their heads, an algorithm for a search engine isn't an exact science, and so anybody in any moment can end up as an edge case that Google doesn't handle properly.
If we have 2-3 major search engines with equal market share, we gain the following benefits:
1. Spammers will have hard time scamming all engines at once, as they use wildly different backend processing, and as a result receive less traffic (i.e. if half the traffic comes from Live, and half from Google, cheating one of them gets you half the possible traffic, not all of it).
2. If you happen to be an edge case on either search engine after an algorithm tweak, it's much less likely both engines did the same tweak at the same time, so while your traffic will decrease, the other search engines on the market will still provide enough traffic for you until this is sorted.
3. When either search engine does something inappropriate, or questionable (ok, for the simple folk out there: "evil"), people will have easier time going to court to defend their rights, because if the search engine provider becomes abusive and threatens blacklisting, that'll have much smaller effect if the engine isn't a monopolist (in this case they'll mostly hurt themselves).
4. Innovation, innovation, innovation. Just imagine the kind of innovation we'll see from both Yahoo/Microsoft and Google if they had equal market share. Microsoft would have much bigger revenue and thus much bigger incentive to support their position on the market. Google, likewise.
I mean, what's the best we saw of Google as of late? A week ago they changed the layout of their home page which made it JavaScript dependent and harder to work with. That's not innovation, that's regression. As for the rest of their new offerings, they mostly come from companies they bought recently.
Yahoo's holding on to their "portal" strategy since this is where the most of their income comes from so their search acceptable but certainly not good enough or innovative. They can't risk spending too much money on search R&D alone.
As for Microsoft Live, they're apparently trying to come up with interesting interfaces for search, but they are quite young on that one market, their search results aren't really good, and need the experience of Yahoo to give them a boost and incentive to spend more research in the area.
So, bottom line: monopoly is never good, even when it's supposedly "not evil".
Competitors will have to do something else (Score:2)
Re:Do no evil, despite a monopoly? (Score:4, Insightful)
As to some of your following rational, let me take a shot at it.:
Yahoo is also interesting in that they are moving towards changing their infrastructure to make it easier to change. They are hoping to have the nimbalness of Google, as well as the ability to control their ad space.
MS is throwing more than 10x the money that both of the other company combined are currently throwing at it. Give MS time.
If you want true innovation, then disallow such a merger/partnership. MS has never used a merger for information. It has always been market share that they want. In addition, MS already has a monster monopoly that they can (and apparently are ) using to help themselves. They would use this to shut out Google, not compete against them.
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I'm not sure how you imagine the workflow in Microsoft regarding this, maybe something like this:
Jo: Hey, spammers are attacking Live.com successfully!
Bob: Yup, I see that.
Jo: Ok, I'll analyze why this is happening and propose a fix...
Bob: NO! WAIT! Don't forget: we have a long history of poor security.
Jo: Oh yea, what the hell was I thinking. W
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What sorts of things have you got in mind?
Google home page, javascript dependant? (Score:3, Informative)
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Better products, not mergers! (Score:2)
When Google started, the dominant search services were Altavista and Yahoo. Google didn't need to merge with anyone to completely dominate the search business, they just created a better search algorithm.
If either Microsoft or Yahoo or anyone else wants to compete better against Google, the first thing to do is to hire talented *technical* people and let them work at developing a better sear
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If people spent more time creating genuinely *valuable* and original creative content for their sites instead of hirin
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While their "design" has started to suck in many areas (Google groups for instance), you don't need javascript to use the homepage.
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Why not? (Score:2)
Google is very important, but it is not the end of it all when it comes to the Internet.
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The "communications revolution" goes on (Score:4, Interesting)
But the world turns and the new replaces the old. Such is how it always has been and always will be; try to feel just a little sorry (if you can) for those who become irrelevant in tomorrow's world. One day, it'll be your own chosen career or industry that slips below the horizon.
Even the (rightfully) hated RIAA and MPAA are simply trying every angle they can in hopes of propping up their dying organizations for a little longer. The damage they do as they thrash around in their death throes will take years to clean up - but they will die, and the mess will be cleaned up.
Against this background, why be surprised that some newspapers think that Google should pay them for the privelege of indexing their web pages? If they could make that pig fly, they could compensate for the loss in subscription revenues for - maybe another year or so. Google chooses not to pay, and chooses rightly. These companies are doomed and there's nothing for Google or anyone else to gain by delaying their demise.
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If independent news pages, who depend on the revenue of ads and sponsoring, cannot cover their costs anymore, they will have to go. The large news media still have their revenue from good ol' newspaper or other offline publications, so they will survive.
I wouldn't call it a good development to return to the pre-internet state, where you have a handful of newspapers to pick from that write essentially the same 'cause they belong to the same business group.
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If anything, Google is encouraging variety in reporting.
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They should be paying Google (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:They should be paying Google (Score:5, Interesting)
Look, like most I just don't have time to visit a couple of hundred sites to keep up on things. I want headlines and leads with enough information to let me know whether or not it is worth the effort to visit the news source. They should be thanking Google for providing the opportunity to garner more readers and subsequently increase their ad revenue.
You're biased. They should be paying Google just as much as Google should pay them.
Google isn't a charity organisation, there's no need for anyone to thank them. They are in this business to profit from other people's content. If there's no content, there's no Google. If there aren't search engines, the content can't be found.
The balance in this relationship is closer to the middle than strongly going on either side.
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It looks to me that YOU should be paying Google. You're the one getting the useful service.
I pay Google for its services the same way as I pay for other advertising supported media services.
Failing to adapt (Score:3, Insightful)
The old media who fail to adapt will be driven to extinction. The traffic driver now is Google, in the future it may be something else, and so on.
There's a good example here of a new mass media company in Indonesia. They provide the news for free, with RSS feeds and so on. But instead of just that, as many old media company trying to move into Internet --- they also have a web store, ad-service via SMS, resell their incoming traffic, sell web-development & consultancy services,
sell exclusive contents paid by simple premium SMS, successfully built an online community AND capitalize on it to make their Web 2.0 websites successful, and many other creative inventions.
The old media on Internet have very high "hit-and-run" traffic. People came, read the news, and went away.
The new media company I mentioned above, however, is able to capitalize on their incoming traffic; people will linger on for longer, actually do transactions with them; bottom line, more revenue streams.
Again, this is not the fault of Google. The fault is at those who fail to adapt.
Excuse me? (Score:3, Insightful)
I had a reasonably high-ranking UK blogger link to a blog entry of mine. He even cited a bit of it. So, he entertained some readers a little. At the same time, the hyperlink saw my traffic (and my tiny adwords revenue) double for about a week after.
What I could have done is taken the same stupid attitude as the papers "stop using my content" and sat back in the satisfaction that he wouldn't be leeching off my content. He'd have maybe had less to interest his readers. But I would have lost some revenue.
Don't these people get this?
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Except, of course, Google isn't making any money off Google News. Google News runs no ads.
Not to encourage such things, but... (Score:2)
This is like a major newspaper asking (Score:2)
newstands to pay a fee to them because the presence of the newspapers attracts people to the newstands.
Maybe the managers thinking about this should just leave the media business. They don't seem to know anything about it.
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I have no idea whether this is the case on other countries, but here in Brazil newsstands don't "buy" inventory in any permanent way, except in rare cases. Of course they do pay to get the newspapers and magazines in their hands to be resold, but in the end of the day (or month) the publishers accept back (and pay back) whatever wasn't sold. If nothing was sold, the newsstand owner receives back every single ce
Slightly OT, but lets just mention all print media (Score:2)
I disagree... (Score:3, Insightful)
I subscribe to print editions of TIME and Economist purely for the joy of reading the views.
The way in which it is presented also matters, not just the bland headline stating "Lohan arrested for DUI".
I guess that's why FOX news is popular than ABC or PBS.
Secondly, a paper magazine allows me to lie down on couch or bed and read at lesuire.
Thirdly, a paper magazine has readers letters, opinion, etc., all concise in 48-pages.
Magazines
Conflicts... Bah... (Score:2)
I don't think Google is violating any laws by posting stuff like one-sentence excerpts from sites and a link to them. They do the same on Google Web Search, and others do it to on their news search services. So I don't see a problem there. And if they remove sites that have a "personal" problem with it, they have no problem there either. Voila, dispute and headaches solved. I should become a manager.
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The fact that they've chosen the courts rather than basic web services shows what technological idiots they are.
The opposite (Score:2)
Maybe they should use a different stance. (Score:2)
What about Drudge? (Score:3, Interesting)
if it was opt in. (Score:3, Insightful)
Most People Aren't So Open Minded (Score:2)
In my experience, usually not so much.
Or in other words, "You must be new around here."
What a moron (Score:3, Insightful)
Uh-huh.
Mr. Zell, have you ever looked at Google News? You'll notice something -- it doesn't run any ads. Not one. How, then, do you think Google is making money off "stealing" your content?
You're a moron, sir.
(Okay, technicality people, yes, now Google is adding news results to their "universal search". Do you really think that Google would take a major revenue hit if it reverted to the business model it had back three weeks ago?)
Now it is more difficult to not get indexed (Score:3, Insightful)
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So don't click on it if it offends your sensibilities so greatly. Personally I like being able to see a variety of perspectives, even propaganda laced ones. You have to pay attention to propaganda so you know what information other people are being fed.
Google news does not present you with truth. It presents you with a distribution of news.
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If you want something more closely resembling the truth, then try getting your news from people who have no real stake in the outcome. It seems to me that a critical thinker would actually read stuff from many sides, and then maybe make some kind of decision about