Google Halts Its Curated News Plan in Australia, Calling Government's Rules 'Unworkable' (engadget.com) 52
Google "has decided to freeze plans to launch its curated News Showcase in Australia over claims the draft News Media Bargaining Code is 'unworkable'," reports Engadget:
Google still objected to what it called a "must include, must pay" approach in the code where it not only has to pay news outlets it links to, but is obligated to carry those outlets for free. The company argued it would deal with payment demands that would "not [be] financially sustainable" for any firm. It also argued that the code was too broad and could prove costly if there's a claimed violation, with Google potentially paying up to 10 percent of its Australian revenue for a single infraction.
"We believe these conditions could be amended to make it a fair and workable code," Google argues in its blog post, "a code that can work together with commercial deals and programs like News Showcase."
"The agreements we have signed in Australia and around the world show that not only are we willing to pay to license news content for a new product, but that we are able to strike deals with publishers," Google argues in its blog post, "without the draft code's onerous and prescriptive bargaining framework and one-sided arbitration model."
Engadget notes that Australia's Competition and Consumer Commission "previously said that a Google open letter decrying the code 'contains misinformation,' and that the company wouldn't be required to charge for free services or share data with news organizations like the letter suggested."
"We believe these conditions could be amended to make it a fair and workable code," Google argues in its blog post, "a code that can work together with commercial deals and programs like News Showcase."
"The agreements we have signed in Australia and around the world show that not only are we willing to pay to license news content for a new product, but that we are able to strike deals with publishers," Google argues in its blog post, "without the draft code's onerous and prescriptive bargaining framework and one-sided arbitration model."
Engadget notes that Australia's Competition and Consumer Commission "previously said that a Google open letter decrying the code 'contains misinformation,' and that the company wouldn't be required to charge for free services or share data with news organizations like the letter suggested."
Here I trust Google more (Score:5, Interesting)
Normally I'd not be inclined to trust Google.
But Google has an army of lawyers to figure out what regulations actually mean. It seems far too common today that regulators pass all sorts of restrictions but do not actually understand the full extent of what is in them, and the implications to companies.
I think Google is wise to just say it has to abandon the whole thing in Australia, with the government looking to be so stern about news summarizing there.
It kind of makes me wonder if any of those rules apply to Apple News? Apple News seems to be structured very differently, maybe not since Apple is heavily leaning towards collecting money from users for access to curated news.
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Ethics? (Score:1)
Profits above ethics for them.
How are ethics involved when we are talking about the news industry? :-)
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That's the thing - Google isn't bailing out due to ethics, they're bailing out because basically the code requires them to hand over a whole bunch of money to multinational news companies in exchange for.... ...nothing that every other entity in Australia couldn't get for free.
It creates an artificial barrier to two specific companies. It's about as market-interfering as you can possibly get.
And whilst government interference in the market can be good when it's to protect consumers, and even under some cir
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The world of politics is a Great Filter to curate a collective of sociopaths.
Very well put! I like that! We have cultivated a fine crop this season, wouldn't you agree? We have vintage going going back to 1976.
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Everybody else would also have to pay, but they don't lean on anybody else until after they make the biggest company come to an agreement.
It is a double-edged strategy; if Google is willing to walk away, and does so, then Google can only win. They can't convince anybody that they'll be able to force anybody to pay it, they'll have to make the demanded changes and come back. Google might have to take a time out, a temporary loss, but then they get a better program than they'd have had to agree to if the gove
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However, Google makes slightly less money if it leaves Australia, whereas someone else (DuckDuckGo, Bing, etc) will be only too happy to fill in Google's shoes and take that Australian revenue for themselves - meaning no real loss of service for Australians.
While those alternatives might make less money per impression in complying with the new legislation, by taking over Google's market share, the alternatives still end up wi
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The issue has nothing to do with "survival' on either side.
The proposal is for the company to lose money. For the big rich Americans to give some digital welfare to Australian news companies.
Smaller companies with less money and go there to lose some if they want, but for them it would in become a matter of survival, because of the size of the potential penalties. Nobody is going to go into a controlled market where they're guaranteed to lose money and might also get fined.
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No one seems to have mentioned it this far - but "Australian news companies" is Rupert Murdoch.
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He's irrelevant, though. He's 89 years old. Professional managers replaced him long ago. He's just an estate now.
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True. But the point remains that it is a monopoly and Google is a competitor. This reeks of corruption.
Re: Here I trust Google more (Score:2)
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blub blub blub blub blub
Yes, yes, google got rich and made use of the commons to do it.
No, google did not get rich off the work of Australians.
No, google did not get rich off of free linking to news. Everybody always had free linking to all the websites.
Re:Here I trust Google more (Score:5, Interesting)
Murdoch's Newscorp (and others) have watched revenues plummet, and this is supposed to stem that tide (perhaps a bad analogy, the tide's going out, but whatever).
Murdoch has gotten away with anything he wanted in the past, but that tide may be turning.
One of our past Prime Ministers has launched a petition for an investigation into "fair and balanced news", and it's getting some traction:
https://www.aph.gov.au/ [aph.gov.au]/petition_sign?id=EN1938
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The AU government is completely incompetent, and has been trying various head-scratching moves to censor and control the internet for around a decade. According to my local friend, the only reason the internet there ISN'T completely censored (yet) is the government is so fucking incompetent they're having issues implementing their own censorship protocols.
This move by google is the clincher. The rules written by the idiot government are so unworkable they're willing to say 'fuck off' to an entire moderate
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The government doesn't censor the internet, they make ISPs do it, who of course, aren't interested in spending their money protecting another corporations IP. So they use the lazy answer of DNS redirection.
https://www.holdingredlich.com... [holdingredlich.com]
While the " idiot government" doesn't have the 'corporations have more rights' attitude common to the USA, most of the censorship is performed under copyright law: Guess which country demands protection the most times?
I'm no fan of politicians but I notice that many p
The $12-22 Billion Dollar Question mark (Score:2)
Re: Here I trust Google more (Score:2)
No one reads or cares about Apple News, it's a nothingburger so they get away with a lot.
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Fuck why should google pay these cunts for their pay rise?
Because journalists are doing the legwork and Google is distributing their content for profit?
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Explain how Google makes money on distributing news that is a detriment to those who produces the news.
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Google doesn't give anything away, it only re-directs traffic to the new-site. So explain to me how google is giving something away for free here?
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ABC don't no any "legwork" - go look at the bullshit they publish.
but - ignore the comment on how they were the only new media in Australia who voted themselves a payrise, while 7, 9, 10, and News all went though job losses.
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'Bullshit' because it doesn't parrot Coalition voting bias? Despite overrepresenting the drum and Qanda with conservative opinion?
The commercial channels should go back to producing quality dramas instead of endless cooking, home improvement, dating and talent shows. Aside from the footy, I rarely have any reason to access 7, 9 or 10. They can go broke for all anyone cares. Scrap the reality TV nonsense and they'd attract bigger advertising revenue to fund journalism.
As for print media, Rupert's son has lef
Re: Quality of "Journalism" in Australia (Score:3, Insightful)
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Google and the Aus government should
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Why would you single out ABC? Murdoch owns the vast majority of news outlets in Australia and whats left is split between maybe 3 smaller groups all of which have shown a disturbing inclination to right wing bias.
Yes, the ABC has somewhat been compromised by the Tories putting its henchmen all though its power structure forcing it to put right wing defamers like Andrew Bolt onto the air regularly, but man, at least its not NewsCorp and its likely it could still be salvaged.
And whats left? The Guardian? UK O
"Big Banana" Scott at work again (Score:1)
He's no stable genius that one.
Re: "Big Banana" Scott at work again (Score:2)
Newspaper failing business model (Score:2)
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My first job out of college was at a "local" newspaper owned by one of the big outfits. This was over 30 years ago. Silly me was stunned to realize how much of the paper was not produced locally. After subtracting the classified ads and ignoring the stock market section, probably less than 15 percent was local and much of that was covering the sports at local schools. Everything else was from "the wire." Most newspapers slashed their journalism budget (as in feet on the local/state beat) long before the int
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If the rest go bankrupt then there would be enough money left for the remaining ones to actually pay for good journalism. I'm willing to wait while 90% of the papers die and I won't shed a tear for them.
Since when has monopoly consolidation improved quality? When those 90% go away, you'll end up with a bigger Fox News, who literally argue in court that they are entertainment and no reasonable view should take them seriously.
So Sad Google (Score:1)
Google should just walk away. (Score:4, Insightful)
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If providing access to Google News is too much trouble and expense, then they should just drop it completely, like they did in Spain.
Google didn't go willingly in Spain. They went as a last resort. Simply saying that they should walk away rather than do the sensible thing and play both a PR and lobbying game in parallel is a poor business strategy.
Google has a revenue stream ( you don't think they provide news links for shits and giggles do you? ) which is under assault from the established media. Simply handing your competitors what they want and walking away is not a a wise move. It's akin to KFC no longer selling fried chicken when fr