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France Hits Google With $593 Million Fine In News Copyright Battle (reuters.com) 44

Google was fined 500 million euros ($593 million) Tuesday by French competition regulators for failing to comply with an order to negotiate fair deals with news publishers for the use of their content. CNBC reports: France's Competition Authority said Google had breached an April 2020 ruling that ordered the company to negotiate "in good faith" licensing deals with publishers and news agencies for any reuse of copyrighted content. In January, Google agreed to a major digital copyright deal with French publishers. As part of that deal, the company said it would negotiate individual licenses with members of France's press alliance covering related rights and access to a new service called News Showcase. France's competition agency took issue with this, saying it did not include a discussion on remuneration for current uses of content covered by "neighboring rights" for the press. The regulator added that Google restricted the scope of talks with the media by refusing to include the use of press images.

It is the largest-ever fine imposed by France's competition watchdog for a company's failure to adhere to one of its rulings, according to French news agency AFP. Google was ordered by the regulator to present an offer of remuneration for the use of protected content to publishers within two months or risk facing fines of up to 900,000 euros per day. Google said it was "very disappointed" by Tuesday's decision. "We have acted in good faith throughout the entire process," a Google spokesperson told CNBC. "The fine ignores our efforts to reach an agreement, and the reality of how news works on our platforms." "To date, Google is the only company to have announced agreements on neighboring rights," the spokesperson added. "We are also about to finalize an agreement with AFP that includes a global licensing agreement, as well as the remuneration of their neighboring rights for their press publications."

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France Hits Google With $593 Million Fine In News Copyright Battle

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  • ...and the reality of how news works on our platforms

    ... and we don't want to change how we do things even if you tell we have to; the money looks good to us as it stands right now.

    • Governments across the world such as here in Australia have been pursuing agreements with big tech to launder money to incumbent media empires such as Rupert.

      One would have thought Google would have learned to roll over by now.

  • confused (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Is this basically the snippets on news.google.com or something else? If it is, can't news websites just use robots.txt to stop it? Doesn't news.google.com help bring people to news websites? Am I missing something here?

    • That's pretty much exactly it. The (French / German / Italian / Australian / ..) government wants to force Google to show news content on Google sites and then force Google to pay the news providers more $$ for it than free market.

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @07:36PM (#61580007) Journal

      Sure, they could use robots.txt to tell Google not to use snippets from their site. Then Google would use AP directly, or a competing site, rather than going through the local site, since the local site doesn't want Google sending people to their site. Of course, they'd make no money from Google traffic, if they decided to refuse Google traffic via robots.txt.

      Much more profitable for them is to have the government force people to use their site, and force them to pay for it. So they have Google forced to use them, rather than Google just not using that site.

      Maybe Slashdot can get that deal. Get some lawmaker to force Google to send people to Slashdot, and pay Slashdot for the privilege, rather than Google sending people to competing sites.

    • This isnt the first time this has happened, 2 other EU countries tried this including spain. Guess what google did? They removed all spain based news site from their crawler and told them to "pound sand". The results were the news sites in spain saw a massive dip in traffic to their site after wards. In the end google is in control and unless vast majority of countries do this google will just force their rules on to people.
  • A simple solution would be to ban all French news from Google. I don't think it generates any profit anyway. Ads are not displayed with Google News.
    • Google tried that. This fine is in part due to France not finding that an acceptable solution. It seems that the French government essentially is only happy if Google carries the French news sources and pays them what they want.
  • Just delist them until they give you a written statement that you can use their content free of charge. And if they don't, well, 9 out of 10 times it ain't really a loss.

  • The ECJ will send the French packing.

  • Europe has hit Google with 10B in fines, adding this will bring it close to 11B.
    And yet, they fine ALL OF their local car makers less than .9B total for dieselgate and other crimes that they committed.

    So much for justice or fairness.

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