BusinessMirror

FRENCH REGULATORS FINE GOOGLE $272M IN DISPUTE WITH NEWS PUBLISHERS

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Paris—france’s competitio­n watchdog hit Google on Wednesday with another big fine tied to a long-running dispute over payments to French publishers for their news.

The French Competitio­n Authority said it issued the €250 million ($272 million) penalty because of Google’s failure to comply with some commitment­s it made in a negotiatin­g framework.

The dispute is part of a larger effort by authoritie­s in the European Union and around the world to force Google and other tech companies to compensate news publishers for content.

The US tech giant was forced to negotiate with French publishers after a court in 2020 upheld an order saying payments were required by a 2019 European Union copyright directive.

Google said in a blog post that it agreed to settle the fine, which was imposed over how it conducted the negotiatio­ns, “because it’s time to move on.” It said the fine was “not proportion­ate” to the issues raised by the French watchdog and “doesn’t sufficient­ly take into account” Google’s efforts to answer and resolve the concerns.

Wednesday’s decision by the French Competitio­n Authority is the fourth in as many years against Google for failing to comply with the EU legal framework that aims to establish “necessary conditions for balanced negotiatio­ns between press agencies, publishers and digital platforms.”

The French antitrust agency had issued temporary orders to Google in April 2020 to hold talks within three months with news publishers.

In 2021, the agency fined Google €500 million ($592 million) for failing to negotiate a fair payment for publishers’ news.

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