The Niagara Falls Review

Google to pay $1B over 3 years for news content

Company has signed agreements with nearly 200 publicatio­ns

- KELVIN CHAN

LONDON— Google will pay publishers $1 billion (U.S.) over the next three years for their content, the company’s latest effort to diffuse tensions over its dominance of the news industry.

The company said Thursday that it has signed agreements for its news partnershi­p program with nearly 200 publicatio­ns in Germany, Brazil, Argentina, Canada, the U.K. and Australia.

“This financial commitment

— our biggest to date — will pay publishers to create and curate high-quality content for a different kind of online news experience,” CEO Sundar Pichai said in a blog post.

On Thursday, Google’s News Showcase is launching in Brazil and Germany, featuring story panels that let publishers package stories with features like timelines.

It will appear first on Google News on Android, then Apple iOS, before it is rolled out to Google Discover and Search.

The publicatio­ns that have signed up include Germany’s Der Spiegel and Stern and Brazil’s Folha de S.Paulo.

Other features like video, audio and daily briefings are also in the works. Pichai said Google is working to expand the program to other countries, namely India, Belgium and the Netherland­s.

He did not say whether the U.S. would be included.

The funding builds on a news licensing program launched by Google in June, as it seeks defuse tensions with the beleaguere­d news industry. News companies want Google, and its Silicon Valley rival Facebook, to pay for the news content that they siphon from commercial media while taking the lion’s share of ad revenue. Skeptics remain, however. The European Publishers

Council said it’s an attempt by Google to stave off legislatio­n and government action to get them to negotiate.

“Many are quite cynical about Google’s perceived strategy,” said Angela Mills Wade, executive director of the council. “By launching a product, they can dictate terms and conditions, undermine legislatio­n designed to create conditions for a fair negotiatio­n, while claiming they are helping to fund news production.”

The council’s members include German publisher Axel Springer and the British unit of media tycoon Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., which have been fighting a yearslong battle to get the tech giants to pay for news stories appearing on their platforms.

The pressure has been rising over compensati­on in a number of countries for Google and Facebook. Australia’s government is drafting a law to make Facebook and Google pay the country’s media companies for the news content they use by early October. Facebook has responded by threatenin­g to block Australian news content rather than pay for it.

In France, Google has refused to show snippets of some stories as it fights government demands for license fees to publishers, as required by a recent European Union directive.

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