Kuwait Times

Google hit with $272m French fine in news copyright fight

French magazines, newspapers lodged case with regulator in 2019

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PARIS: French regulators said Wednesday they were fining Google 250 million euros ($272 million) for breaching commitment­s on paying media companies for reproducin­g their content online and for using their material for its AI chatbot without telling them. Google had made commitment­s in 2022 to negotiate fairly with French news organizati­ons, a year after the Competitio­n Authority hit the US tech giant with a 500-million-euro fine over the long-running dispute.

Organizati­ons representi­ng French magazines and newspapers - as well as Agence France-Presse (AFP) - had lodged a case with the regulator in 2019. Under its commitment­s, the US tech giant has to provide news groups with a transparen­t offer of payment within three months of receiving a copyright complaint. But the regulator said Wednesday it was imposing the new fine on Google for “failing to respect commitment­s made in 2022” and not negotiatin­g in “good faith” with news publishers.

The US tech giant also used content from press agencies to train its artificial intelligen­ce platform - Bard (now known as Gemini) - without notifying them or the authority, the regulator said.

Google failed to provide publishers and news agencies a technical solution allowing them to object to the use of their content, “hindering” their ability to negotiate remunerati­on, it added. The watchdog said Google had agreed to “not dispute the facts” as part of the settlement process and proposed “a series of corrective measures” in response to the failings identified by the authority. In a statement, Google said the fine was disproport­ionate and did not “sufficient­ly take into account the efforts we have made to answer and resolve the concerns raised — in an environmen­t where it’s very hard to set a course because we can’t predict which way the wind will blow next.” “We’ve settled because it’s time to move on,” the company said.

The EU created in 2019 a form of copyright called “neighborin­g rights” that allows print media to demand compensati­on for using their content. France has been a test case for the rules and after initial resistance Google and Facebook both agreed to pay some French media for articles shown in web searches. Other European Union countries have also challenged Google over news content.

Spain’s competitio­n watchdog launched an investigat­ion into Google last year for alleged anti-competitiv­e practices affecting news agencies and press publicatio­ns. In 2022, Germany’s antitrust regulator shelved an investigat­ion into Google’s News Showcase service, after the tech giant made “important adjustment­s” to ease competitio­n concerns. — AFP

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PARIS, France: The Google logo displayed on a screen HUK YLÅLJ[LK VU H [HISL[ PU 7HYPZ · (-7

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