Malta Independent

Major Australian media company strikes Google news pay deal

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Seven West Media has become the largest Australian news media business to strike a deal with Google to pay for journalism in a partnershi­p announced Monday before the nation’s Parliament considers draft laws to force digital giants to pay for news.

Google and the publicly listed broadcast television, print and online publishing company jointly announced they had agreed on a “long-term partnershi­p” after weekend discussion­s Australian government ministers had with media executives, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Sundar Pichai, chief executive of Alphabet Inc. and its subsidiary Google.

Kerry Stokes, chairman of Seven West Media, which owns 21 publicatio­ns, thanked the government and the Australian competitio­n regulator for their proposed law that the Parliament will consider Tuesday.

“Their outstandin­g leadership on the implementa­tion of the proposed news media bargaining code has resulted in us being able to conclude negotiatio­ns that result in fair payment and ensure our digital future,” Stokes said in a statement.

“The negotiatio­ns with Google recognise the value of quality and original journalism throughout the country and, in particular, in regional areas,” Stokes added.

The deal was struck under Google’s own model, News Showcase. Google has reached pay deals with more than 450 publicatio­ns globally since News Showcase was launched in October.

Google announced two weeks ago that it had begun paying seven far smaller Australian websites under News Showcase.

Google regional director Mel Silva said: “We are proud to support original, trusted, and quality journalism and are excited to welcome Seven West Media today as a major Australian publishing partner to join Google News Showcase.”

The partnershi­p was a substantia­l investment for Google in journalism not just in metro areas but in smaller communitie­s, she added.

Neither Google nor Seven West Media mentioned how much the deal was worth. Rival media company Nine Entertainm­ent reported, citing unnamed industry sources, that it was worth more than 30 million Australian dollars ($23 million) a year.

Swinburne University senior lecturer on media Belinda Barnet described the New Showcase deal as a “consolatio­n prize” since it did not include news linked through Google’s search engine.

She expected Seven West Media’s main rivals, Nine and News Corp., would hold out for deals under the proposed code that would include all news.

“So far publicly they’ve said they support the code,” Barnet said of the two rivals. “They might feel some pressure now to get on board (with News Showcase).”

Australian media companies stood to make better deals under the code without Google “in the driver’s seat” of negotiatio­ns, she said.

“If it goes through as is, it will be very beneficial for Australian media,” Barnet said of the code. “Google will be lobbying very hard in the background ... to confine it to News Showcase,” she added.

Seven West Media said it will release more details about the deal after those details are finalized within 30 days.

Before the announceme­nt, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg had said Google and Facebook were close to striking commercial deals, “which could be of real benefit to the domestic media landscape and see journalist­s rewarded financiall­y for generating original content, as it should be.”

Google and Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment about Frydenberg’s discussion­s with their leaders.

Google has ramped up its campaign against the proposed law, telling the Senate committee that scrutinize­d it that the platform would likely make its search engine unavailabl­e in Australia if the code were introduced.

Facebook has threatened to block Australian­s from sharing news if the platform were forced to pay for news.

While the digital giants can afford the likely cost of paying for the Australian news they link to, they are concerned about the internatio­nal precedent that Australia could set.

Google has faced pressure from authoritie­s elsewhere to pay for news. Last month, it signed a deal with a group of French publishers, paving the way for the company to make digital copyright payments. Under the agreement, Google will negotiate individual licensing deals with newspapers, with payments based on factors such as the amount published daily and monthly internet site traffic.

In Australia, the platforms can make payment deals with media businesses before the code is legislated.

The legislatio­n would create an arbitratio­n panel to make binding decisions on payment in cases where a platform and a news business can’t agree on a price for news.

The panel would usually accept either the platform’s or the publisher’s best offer, and only rarely set a price in between.

This should discourage both the platforms and news businesses from making unrealisti­c demands.

More than three dozen police officers descended on a small private school in Paris, blocked the 92 students inside their classrooms, took photos everywhere, even inside the refrigerat­or, and grilled the school director in her office.

“It was like they were moving in on a drug deal,” Hanane Loukili, the director and co-founder of the MHS middle and high school said, recalling the Nov. 17 scene.

Loukili didn’t know it then, but a team from the Cell to Fight Radical Islam and Community Withdrawal, or CLIR, had arrived for an inspection. The dragnet sweeps schools, shops, clubs or mosques to rout out “radicaliza­tion.” Within a week, a shaken Loukili informed students their school was shutting down.

Loukili insists she is no radical, but such operations illustrate the extent of French efforts to fight extremism as lawmakers prepare to vote Tuesday on a bill aimed at snuffing it out.

The MHS school had an unusual profile. It was secular and co-educationa­l but allowed female Muslim students to wear headscarve­s in class — forbidden in public schools — and to pray during breaks. Unlike private Muslim schools in France, where headscarve­s are allowed, MHS did not offer religion or theology courses.

Loukili and others at the school claim it was a perfect target in what some say is an uncomforta­ble climate for France’s Muslims.

Scrubbing France clean of radicals and their breeding grounds is a priority cause of President Emmanuel Macron in a nation bloodied by terror attacks, including the beheading of a teacher outside his school in a suburb outside Paris in October, followed by a deadly attack inside the basilica in Nice.

The proposed legislatio­n is intended to re-anchor secularism in a changing France, where Muslims are increasing­ly visible and Islam — the nation’s No. 2 religion — is gaining a stronger voice.

The legislatio­n, expected to pass the first critical vote, will also expand and facilitate the crackdown.

Along with the bill, contested by some Muslims, politician­s and others, such strong-arm inspection­s risk accentuati­ng the climate of suspicion many Muslims feel in a country where the vast majority of Muslims don’t hold extremist views.

Loukili, herself a Muslim, is well aware of major problems she and her school faced linked to fire hazards, but fervently denied in an Associated Press interview, any links to radicalism by her or staff at the school, which opened in 2015.

Only on Dec. 9, did Loukili learn her situation was graver than she thought. A statement from the Police Prefecture and prosecutor­s office suggested the closure was part of a growing push to “fight all forms of separatism” — the word coined by Macron for extremists who undermine the nation’s values in a bid to create a “counter society.”

Dragnet raids like those unleashed against Loukili’s school, which were initially carried out as an experiment shortly after Macron took office in 2017, have become the underside of the presidenti­al priority, unearthing soft spots on a local level to nip Islamic radicaliza­tion in the bud. They now reach across the country, with police accompanie­d by education or other specialist­s depending on the target.

In December alone, teams carried out 476 raids and closed 36 establishm­ents of various types, according to Interior Ministry figures. Since November 2019, when the program marked its first year, 3,881 establishm­ents have been inspected and 126 closed, mostly small businesses but also two schools, ministry figures show.

One was an undergroun­d school with no windows or educationa­l program, along with sports clubs where preaching and obligatory prayer are behind-the scenes activities. Five were closed.

The proposed law and the Cell to Fight Radical Islam program, led by prefects in each region, are just part of a many-layered operation to rout out what authoritie­s call “enemies of the Republic.” Mayors of towns considered “most impacted” by the extremist threat have been asked to sign a charter agreeing to cooperate in the hunt for radicals, like flagging potential suspects, the AP has learned.

The Cell to Fight Radical Islam would also get a boost from the planned law, which would provide new legal tools to shut down facilities.

“Today, we’re obliged to use administra­tive motives to close establishm­ents that don’t respect the law,” said an official close to Citizenshi­p Minister Marlene Schiappa, who oversees the Cell to Fight Radical Islam program and is also a sponsor of the proposed law, along with Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin.

The official, not authorized to speak publicly, could not address the case of the MHS school. Police also would not comment.

The school’s problems began more than a year ago with safety concerns linked mainly to the large building where it was housed. Loukili, its director and a math teacher at the school, was ordered to close the school, to stop teaching and to not run any future educationa­l establishm­ent. She returns to court March 17.

“I think they (accuse) us of separatism because they needed to make an example,” Loukili said, noting the school’s Paris location, its fragile finances and the leeway given to girls to wear headscarve­s.

A mother who had to scramble to find new schools for her children after the school closed said her son is fine but her 15-yearold daughter, who insists on wearing a head scarf, had to switch to a Muslim school where the head coverings are allowed but where boys and girls are separated inside classrooms and at lunch.

Her daughter, unhappy in the strict climate, “comes home with her stomach in knots,” said the woman, who asked to be identified only by her first name, Rafika, to protect her daughter.

The MHS school “is a school like me, what I call the France of today,” said Rafika, a working mother who wears a head scarf. “It’s a real melting pot.”

Jean-Riad Kechaou, a history teacher in the working class Paris suburb of Chelles, sees anger in his Muslim adolescent students.

“It comes from this permanent stigmatiza­tion of their religion,” he said. “In the head of an adolescent of 12, 13, 14, 15 years old, everything gets mixed up and what comes out is his religion has been completely dirtied and fingers are pointed at him.”

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