Toronto Star

Paid version of YouTube in the works at Google

Ad-free subscripti­on service slated to debut by year’s end

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Google Inc. plans to offer a subscriber version of YouTube as soon as this year, letting viewers see millions of videos without having to sit through ads.

Revenue from the new feature, which will put Google into more direct competitio­n with streaming services such as Netflix Inc. and Hulu LLC, will be shared with video creators, Google told them in an email that was obtained by Bloomberg. The service may debut by the end of the year, said a person with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified because the plans aren’t public.

“By creating a new paid offering, we’ll generate a new source of revenue that will supplement your fast growing advertisin­g service,” the letter said.

Google has been moving closer to charging users for content; the web company introduced a subscripti­on-style music service within YouTube in November, and has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on talent and production facilities to boost original content on the video website, which has more than one billion monthly viewers. With ad-free sub- scriptions, Google is moving closer to competing with streaming services, including HBO Now (which debuted this week), for people’s attention as they spend more time watching videos on the web and on mobile devices.

“While we can’t comment on ongoing discussion­s, giving fans more choice to enjoy the content they love and creators more opportunit­y to earn revenue are always amongst our top priorities,” Google’s YouTube said in a statement, without commenting on the timing of the service.

YouTube will offer all the same videos without ads for a monthly fee, which hasn’t been set yet, according to the note. The service is also likely to include offline access. Google is alerting content creators because it-wants them to agree to new terms that would let it include clips in the subscripti­on product.

The move to introduce subscripti­ons is part of a broader shift at Google to generate more income that isn’t based on advertisin­g. Viewers can rent or buy movies such as Interstell­ar or The Interview on YouTube. In 2013, YouTube debuted-paid channels for premium content. YouTube’s Music Key Beta, rolled out five months ago, lets users access music on the site without ads for $10 a month, and offers consumers offline access.

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