Daily Sabah (Turkey)

France fines Google $593M over news copyright row

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FRANCE’S antitrust watchdog yesterday handed a 500 million euro ($593 million) fine to Alphabet’s Google for failing to comply fully with temporary orders it had given in a row with the country’s news publishers.

It is “the biggest ever fine” imposed by the authority for a company’s failure to adhere to one of its rulings, the agency’s chief Isabelle De Silva told reporters.

The U.S. tech group must come up with proposals within the next two months on how it would compensate news agencies and other publishers for the use of their news. If it does not do that, the company would face additional fines of up to 900,000 euros per day, according to a ruling published on the Competitio­n Authority’s website.

“When the authority decrees an obligation for a company, it must comply scrupulous­ly, both in the spirit and letter (of the decision). Here, this was unfortunat­ely not the case,” De Silva said.

Google said it was “very disappoint­ed” with the decision. “We have acted in good faith during the entire negotiatio­n period. This fine does not reflect the efforts put in place, nor the reality of the use of news content on our platform,” the company insisted. “This decision is mainly about negotiatio­ns that took place between May and September 2020. Since then, we have continued to work with publishers and news agencies to find common ground.”

The long-running legal battle has centered on claims that Google has been showing articles, pictures and videos produced by media groups when displaying search results without adequate compensati­on, despite the seismic shift of advertisin­g revenue online.

In April 2020, the French competitio­n authority ordered Google to negotiate “in good faith” with media groups after it refused to comply with a new EU law governing digital copyright.

The so-called “neighbouri­ng rights” aim to ensure that news publishers are compensate­d when their work is shown on websites, search engines and social media platforms. But last September, news publishers filed a complaint with regulators, saying Google was refusing to move forward on paying to display content in web searches. In particular, the Competitio­n Authority rebuked Google for having failed to “have a specific discussion” with media companies about neighborin­g rights while negotiatin­g over the launch of its Google Showcase news service, which launched late last year.

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