The Borneo Post

Google unveils new moves to boost struggling news organisati­ons

-

WASHINGTON: Google announced new steps to help struggling news organisati­ons Monday – including an end to a longstandi­ng “first click free” policy to generate fresh revenues for publishers hurt by the shift from print to digital.

The moves come amid mounting criticism that online platforms are siphoning off the majority of revenues as more readers turn to digital platforms for news.

“I truly believe that Google and news publishers actually share a common cause,” said Google Vice President Philipp Schindler.

“Our users truly value high quality journalism.”

Google announced a series of measures, the most significan­t of which would be to replace the decade- old policy of requiring news organizati­ons to provide one article discovered in a news search without subscribin­g – a standard known as ‘ first click free.’

This will be replaced by a ‘ f lexible sampling’ model that will allow publishers to require a subscripti­on if they choose at any time.

“We realize that one size does not fit all,” said Richard Ging ras, Googl e ’ s vice president for news.

This will allow news organizat ions to decide whether to show articles at no cost or to implement a ‘paywall’ for some or all content.

Gingras said the new policy, effective Monday, will be in place worldwide.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia