Tag Archives: google

Editors Weblog: French government considering ‘Google tax’

The Editors Weblog rounds up reports in the French media of plans to tax Google and other internet giants, including AOL, Microsoft and Facebook.

The tax would fund government proposals to support content creators online and reflects complaints from music and news organisations that search engines and aggregators are making money from free use of their content online.

The recommendation was made as part of the Zelnik report on the online content and advertising industries. French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he backs some of the proposals, but has made no specific mention of the “Google tax”, according to this Boston.com report.

The French government has taken active steps to help the print and online news industries with schemes such as free newspapers for young readers. Similar fees have previously been proposed for internet service providers by leading editors.

The “Google tax” proposed is reminiscent of a similar scheme suggested by the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) in the UK, which proposed introducing levies for aggregators.

Full story at this link…

Google Public Policy Blog: Google’s open manifesto – what does it mean for publishers?

Some big promises from the search giant in this manifesto posted to its public policy blog yesterday. In The meaning of open, Joshua Rosenberg, senior vice president of product management, says openness as a company and on the web has no clear definition:

The topic of open seems to be coming up a lot lately at Google. I’ve been in meetings where we’re discussing a product and someone says something to the effect that we should be more open. Then a debate ensues which reveals that even though most everyone in the room believes in open we don’t necessarily agree on what it means in practice.

He then goes on to describe what open means for Google’s business – and how the search engine is attempting to become more transparent – a regular sticking point for the newspaper and publishing industry, which have criticised the secrecy surrounding the search engine’s online practices.

Rosenberg also levels another criticism:

We are often attacked for being too big, but sometimes being bigger allows us to take on the impossible.

Whether this will be enough to sate other players (namely newspapers) is uncertain, but it seems Google is making yet more attempts, following its recent launches such as Fast Flip and alternative indexing, to make 2010 the year of olive branches and openness.

Full post at this link…

TechCrunch: Google to acquire Yelp – a missed opportunity for local news?

Google will buy local business reviews site Yelp for at least $500 million, according to TechCrunch.

The search giant is already building a directory of local businesses with its Place Pages, which makes use of its maps and local search tools. Yelp already has data on this and ratings and reviews of local businesses from users.

As media blogger and author Jeff Jarvis points out via Twitter, Google can strengthen its positioning in the local advertising market and has spotted an opportunity in online communities around local business that other media, including newspapers, may have missed.

Full story at this link…

Official Google Blog: Google launches ‘living stories’ with NYTimes and WaPo

“The Living Stories project is an experiment in presenting news, one designed specifically for the online environment (…) Complete coverage of an on-going story is gathered together and prioritised on one URL.”

What’s more Google’s new project allows readers to explore stories by theme, the characters involved or by multimedia coverage. Each time you return to the story URL new developments are highlighted and older news is summarised.

The prototype apparently came from discussions with executives at three newspaper groups and marks another step by Google to work with the publishing industry (see last week’s announcements regarding First Click and indexing) while cleverly re-emphasising its position:

“We believe it’s just as important to experiment with how news organizations can take advantage of the web to tell stories in new ways – ways that simply aren’t possible offline,” an introductory post on the Official Google Blog explains.

“While we have strong ideas about how information is experienced on the web, we’re not journalists and we don’t create content.”

Kevin Kelleher: ‘Does Google even understand what news is?’

Read on, only if you can bear any more Google-Murdoch discussion. Writing on GigaOM.com, Kevin Kelleher critiques Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s recent Wall Street Journal piece on Google and news. Kelleher argues that personalised news is the opposite of what news should be:

Google’s algorithms are very handy for shopping or entertainment recommendations. But I don’t like it ‘personalising’ news. Serving readers news based on what they’ve read can lead to a kind of tunnel vision where they’re insulated from the dissenting views and unpleasant truths.

Some of GigaOM’s commenters interpreted Schmidt’s piece very differently: “I imagined he was talking about personalising the news the way that Google News already does… not by excluding specific stories that might make you uncomfortable, but by allowing you to focus on the types of stories you find interesting,” writes one. Full post at this link…

#WANIndia2009: Audio – Google’s David Drummond on working with publishers

There was a more peaceful air on stage at yesterday’s closing debate of the World Association of Newspapers (WAN) conference, entitled What do we do about Google?

David Drummond, senior vice president and chief legal counsel of Google, suggested the search giant hadn’t done enough to ‘engage with newspapers’.

According to WAN-IFRA president Gavin O’Reilly, Google is missing the point: this is an issue of copyright (‘a deceptively simple legal principle’) and a lack of control options for publishers when it comes to search engines and aggregators indexing there content.

Vested interest on both sides, here’s the full audio of Drummond’s speech:

And O’Reilly’s thoughts:

WAN-IFRA president Gavin O’Reilly on Google and newspapers

What did the crowd want? Calls for evidence, from both parties, of what conversations are going on between newspaper groups, representative bodies and Google; and progress, so the debate might be different next year…

Reuters: Google predicts growth in online video ads

Reuters reports from its Global Media Summit in New York:

“The one big shift in the next three to five years is going to be video advertising,” said Nikesh Arora, president of global sales operations and business development.

Google said it monetised one billion video views a week on YouTube during the third quarter.

Full story at this link…

The Register: Google pocketing over half ‘unlicensed news’ money

The Register reports how over a 30-day period in October and November 2009, more than 75,000 websites ‘reused’ at least one newspaper article without sharing revenue with the publisher, according to a new study by the Fair Syndication Consortium. Google, one of the sites assessed, accounted for 53 per cent of the ad revenue attracted by such ‘unlicensed content’. Yahoo accounted for 19 per cent.

“On the 75,195 sites fingered, the Consortium found 112,000 ‘near-exact copies’ of unlicensed articles (meaning reproductions that lifted more than 80 percent of the original article and more than 125 words) and 163,173 ‘excerpts’ (less than 80 per cent of original article and more than 125 words). But in most cases, sites are merely reusing the headline (125 words or less).”

Full story at this link…

Google introduces option for five-a-day free click limit

Google is to allow publishers to limit free access to content found via Google News, it announced in a blog post yesterday.

Publishers using restricted access systems will be able to prevent Google News users looking at more than five pages of content a day without registration or subscription.

In the post, Google said:

“We’re happy to see that a number of publishers are already using First Click Free [a system allowing very first article view by a Google News user] we’ve found that some who might try it are worried about people abusing the spirit of First Click Free to access almost all of their content.

“As most users are generally happy to be able to access just a few pages from these premium content providers, we’ve decided to allow publishers to limit the number of accesses under the First Click Free policy to five free accesses per user each day.

“This change applies to both Google News publishers as well as websites indexed in Google’s Web Search. We hope that this encourages even more publishers to open up more content to users around the world!”

Channel 4 News: @robertandrews and @ciaranj debate News International, Bing and Google

Further to yesterday’s news from the Financial Times that Microsoft is considering paying for news content to appear on its search engine Bing (in a ‘web pact’ with News International), Channel 4 News last night debated the potential impact this could have on the market.

Krishnan Guru-Murphy discussed with paidContent:UK editor, Robert Andrews, and head of social media at global media agency Mindshare, Ciarán Norris.