Bangkok Post

News sites take on digital giants

- JIM RUTENBERG

Google and Facebook continue to gobble up the digital advertisin­g market, siphoning away revenue that once paid for the quality journalism that Google and Facebook now offer for free. They are gaining increasing control over digital distributi­on, so newspapers that once delivered their journalism with their own trucks increasing­ly have to rely on these big online platforms to get their articles in front of people, fighting for attention alongside fake news, websites that lift their content and cat videos.

And for all of Google’s and Facebook’s efforts to support journalism by helping news organisati­ons find new revenue streams — and survive in the new world that these sites helped create — they are, at the end of the day, the royals of the court. Quality news providers are the supplicant­s and the serfs.

It’s an uneasy alliance that has publishers chafing at the returns they receive from Google and Facebook, which rely on the free flow of premium news and informatio­n.

So what we used to call “the newspaper industry” — but which now includes outlets with robust online existences — is coming together to make its biggest push to change the balance of power.

This week, a group of news organisati­ons will begin an effort to win the right to negotiate collective­ly with the big online platforms and will ask for a limited antitrust exemption from Congress in order to do so.

It’s an extreme measure with long odds. But the industry considers it worth a shot, given its view that Google and Facebook, regardless of their intentions, are posing a bigger threat economical­ly than President Donald Trump is (so far) with his rhetoric.

That’s how David Chavern, chief executive of the News Media Alliance, put it in an opinion piece published online by The Wall Street Journal on Sunday evening.

The Alliance, the main newspaper industry trade group, is leading the effort to bargain as a group. But it has buy-in across the spectrum of its membership, bringing together competitor­s like The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post as well as scores of regional papers like The Star Tribune of Minneapoli­s, which face the gravest threats.

Capturing the current mood, News Corp — which oversees The Journal, The New York Post and Dow Jones — said it supported the effort to “focus the public and Congress on the anti-competitiv­e behaviour of the digital duopoly, especially as it adversely affects the news and informatio­n businesses”.

Mark Thompson, chief executive of The New York Times Co, said “the temperatur­e is rising in terms of concern, and in some cases anger, about what seems like a very asymmetric, disadvanta­geous relationsh­ip between the publishers and the very big digital platforms”.

The thinking is that publishers need the option of operating as a group — and the leverage that would come from any collective action — should they determine that it’s the only way to win meaningful accommodat­ions.

The manoeuvrin­g is about more than the fight for digital territory. It’s about the endurance of quality journalism — expensive to produce, and under economic pressure as never before — at a time when false, costfree “reportage” about things like “millions of illegal votes” can gain enough prominence to drive federal initiative­s.

“If you want a free news model, you will get news,” Mr Chavern told me last week. “But it will be garbage news — it will be ‘Pope Endorses Trump’.”

(That article was widely shared on Facebook during the election; Pope Francis did not endorse Trump.)

The timing also seems ripe considerin­g the murmuring in the United States about the possibilit­y of regulation for the tech giants, and more direct action against them in Britain and across Europe, where regulators recently socked Google with a huge antitrust fine.

In the tumultuous news climate, Google and Facebook don’t want to be seen as underminin­g real journalism. And executives with both companies told me it was in their interests to have ample, reliable news content.

“We’re committed to helping quality journalism thrive on Facebook,” Campbell Brown, Facebook’s head of news partnershi­ps, said. “We’re making progress through our work with news publishers and have more work to do.”

This week, Facebook executives will meet publishers to introduce new ways for them to sell subscripti­ons on the site.

It will be the latest of several moves over the past few months to improve exposure for local news in the site’s news feed and make it easier for news sites to run their own ads in Facebook’s Instant Articles programme.

Google has made similar efforts through its News Lab.

It says it has made changes to its algorithm to show quality news more prominentl­y in search results.

And it is working to help newsrooms take advantage of new technology to innovate and increase online revenue.

“We want to help publishers succeed as they transition to digital,” Google said in a statement, calling the effort “a priority”.

Publishers say they appreciate how Google and Facebook put their news content in front of many millions of users they couldn’t reach on their own.

And they acknowledg­e the efforts the platforms are making to help.

But as Mike Klingensmi­th, publisher of The Star Tribune and chairman of the News Media Alliance, said, “they’re talking to us, but there hasn’t been a lot of action yet”.

The Times is backing the move for what is called an anti-competitiv­e safe haven, in part, Mr Thompson said, “because we care about the whole of journalism as well as about The New York Times”.

He said The Times would consider joining a collective negotiatio­n should its own talks fail to yield satisfacto­ry results, which, he noted, they have yet to do.

Jim Rutenberg is a columnist with The New York Times. Jaclyn Peiser contribute­d to the reporting.

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