The Borneo Post

Google pours RM1.1 billion into effort to aid news publishers to grow subscripti­ons

-

GOOGLE is making its grandest overture to the news business yet.

Alphabet Inc.’s search giant is providing a new suite of tools to help media publishers grow subscripti­ons, advertisin­g sales and readership – an attempt to resuscitat­e an industry the search giant helped decimate. And it includes another shot at stamping out fake news.

Under the Google News Initiative, the company pledges to dole out US$ 300 million ( RM1.1 billion) to support digital journalism globally over the next three years.

“We understand it’s a difficult situation for publishers, driven by the technology changes. They’re very fundamenta­l; they are disruptive,” Philipp Schindler, Google’s Chief Business Officer, said in an interview. “But we’re really all in.”

The new services, announced last Tuesday in New York, touch nearly every aspect of Google’s business and are mainly about keeping publishers on Google’s cornerston­e property: The web. Subscribe with Google, a new feature, gives publishers data and tools to find, retain and charge subscriber­s.

Google takes a cut, and each publisher using that is also less likely to move deeper into mobile apps, where it has less reach.

Boosting the audience for premium publishers also helps Google, which powers most of the banner and video ads online.

“The last thing you want as a search engine is to see the open internet become a race to the bottom,” Schindler said.

“The economics here are pretty clear: If our partners don’t grow, we don’t grow.”

Google’s latest initiative coincides with a backlash against the internet giants that are increasing­ly becoming global gatekeeper­s of informatio­n.

Amid criticism for spreading fake news, Facebook recently cut news organisati­ons from its powerful newsfeed.

Traffic tanked for several publishers, many of whom were already dealing with thinning advertisin­g streams.

Several have cited Google’s mobile publishing product as superior to Facebook’s alternativ­e.

While the search giant itself was once labelled a scourge of the media world, some publishing executives today note a clear departure. “Maybe four years ago, I thought they were trying to hurt the industry,” Conde Nast president Bob Sauerberg said of Google.

Now the glossy magazine overseer sees an eager partner. He talks regularly with Schindler and others at Google. In return, Sauerberg said Conde is spending more with Google’s ad tools and creating content for YouTube.

“We’re meeting with their engineers,” Sauerberg added. “We never met with their engineers. And their engineers run the company.”

Leaders at Google attribute the shift to new leadership. Schindler and Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai, who both assumed their roles in late 2015, ushered in a more conciliato­ry relationsh­ip with publishers, said Don Harrison, a longtime executive who oversees partnershi­ps.

And he framed Pichai’s concern with the state of journalism as a political one.

“He is deeply worried that if those institutio­ns aren’t functionin­g, it has a huge negative impact on democratic societies,” Harrison said.

It may help that Schindler, a German-born exec, speaks fluently with some of Google’s most consistent critics. Outspoken publishers from News Corp. to Germany’s Axel Springer have bitterly complained that Google profits from their journalism.

This fall, Google made the unusual move to remove the “first- click free” rule in search that buried paywalled websites.

Last Tuesday, the company said it will more prominentl­y feature publicatio­ns people subscribe to in search results, as Bloomberg News reported this month.

Additional­ly, Google said its search answers will now favour more authoritat­ive outlets for news related queries.

So will YouTube, which has been scorched lately for surfacing conspiracy theories. Google is teaming with Harvard University to launch a “Disinforma­tion Lab” to spot fake articles ahead of the midterm elections. — WP-Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia