Los Angeles Times

Newspapers in antitrust effort

They seek exemption that would allow them to band together to negotiate with Google and Facebook.

- By David Pierson david.pierson@latimes.com Times staff writer Paresh Dave contribute­d to this report.

For years, news organizati­ons have had little recourse but to cede more distributi­on and advertisin­g dollars to Facebook and Google, even agreeing to give away articles in hopes the wider digital audience will pay off in the long run.

But as profits continue to decline in journalism, news media executives have decided time is running out to make a change.

An industry trade group called the News Media Alliance — which counts Los Angeles Times parent company Tronc, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and scores of smaller newspapers among its members — is calling on federal lawmakers to grant the industry an exemption from antitrust rules to negotiate collective­ly with the technology giants.

By banding together, news outlets would have more leverage against two companies that command more than 70% of the $73-billion digital advertisin­g industry in the U.S. By comparison, newspaper ad revenue in 2016 amounted to $18 billion, down from $50 billion a decade ago, according to the Pew Research Center.

The message from the News Media Alliance is simple: Good reporting is timeconsum­ing and expensive — and more important than ever when the Internet is awash with questionab­le news, opinion and hoaxes.

Facebook and Google “don’t employ reporters: They don’t dig through public records to uncover corruption, send correspond­ents into war zones, or attend last night’s game to get the highlights. They expect an economical­ly squeezed news industry to do that costly work for them,” David Chavern, president and chief executive of the News Media Alliance, wrote in an opinion piece Sunday in the Wall Street Journal.

“The only way publishers can address this inexorable threat is by banding together,” Chavern wrote. “If they open a unified front to negotiate with Google and Facebook — pushing for stronger intellectu­al-property protection­s, better support for subscripti­on models and a fair share of revenue and data — they could build a more sustainabl­e future for the news business.”

Facebook and the News Media Alliance didn’t respond Sunday to requests for comment. Google said in a statement it wanted to help publishers transition to digital.

“We remain deeply committed to helping publishers with both their challenges and their opportunit­ies,” the search giant said.

It’s unclear how difficult it would be for the alliance to circumvent antitrust rules that were designed to prevent companies from becoming over-dominant — something newspapers haven’t been accused of in decades.

Regulators, Chavern argued, haven’t been particular­ly strict with Facebook, which has 2 billion users worldwide, and Google, which accounts for upward of 80% of Internet searches. They allowed Google to vault to the top of the online ad market by approving the acquisitio­ns of ad exchanges Doubleclic­k, AdMob and AdMeld. Facebook was also permitted to purchase two major competitor­s, Instagram and WhatsApp.

Newspapers’ market values pale in comparison with Google and Facebook, which enjoy market capitaliza­tions of $649 billion and $434 billion, respective­ly. News Corp., which owns the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post, stands at $7.55 billion, the New York Times Co. at $2.78 billion and Tronc at $409 million.

“The unique role news media continue to play in American politics and history makes it crucial to ensure a fairer fight for revenue between news publishers and these massive informatio­n gateways,” Chavern said. “Today, antitrust laws are insulating Google and Facebook from market forces. News publishers are committed to unleashing those forces to defend their investment­s in great journalism.”

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