Los Angeles Times

Federal investigat­ion sought into Google’s plan to limit news links

- By Wendy Lee and Taryn Luna

The News/Media Alliance, a journalism trade organizati­on and advocacy group, on Tuesday asked federal officials to investigat­e Google after the tech giant said it would limit links to California news outlets in its search results.

The alliance, which represents publishers in the news and magazine industry, said Google’s actions appear “to either be coercive or retaliator­y, driven by Google’s opposition to a pending legislativ­e measure in Sacramento.”

The proposed state measure in question, called the California Journalism Preservati­on Act, would require tech companies, including Google, that sell advertisin­g alongside news content to pay news publishers.

In a letter to the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice, News/ Media Alliance Chief Executive Danielle Coffey called on regulators to “investigat­e whether Google is violating federal law in blocking or impeding their ability to find news that they rely upon for their business, their prosperity, their pleasure, their democracy and, sometimes, their lives.”

The Los Angeles Times is a member of the News/Media Alliance.

Google called the claims in the alliance’s letter “baseless” and the CJPA an “unworkable” bill that hurts “small local publishers to benefit large, out-of-state hedge funds.”

“We have proposed reasonable alternativ­es to CJPA that would increase our support for the California news ecosystem and support California­ns’ access to news,” Google said in a statement. “We’ve long said CJPA isn’t the right approach, and we’ve taken a responsibl­e and transparen­t step to prepare for its possible implementa­tion.”

The FTC and the Justice Department declined to comment.

Google said Friday that it would start to test limiting some users’ access to links from California news outlets and raised concerns in a blog post about the bill, saying it would change its business model.

“We have long said that this is the wrong approach to supporting journalism,” Jaffer Zaidi, vice president of Google’s Global News Partnershi­ps, wrote in a blog post. “If passed, [the billl] may result in significan­t changes to the services we can offer California­ns and the traffic we can provide to California publishers.”

Google would not respond to questions about how many users would be affected by the test, or which California news outlets would be affected.

News organizati­ons in California say they are dealing with declining revenues, in part due to a digital ad market dominated by players like Google, and are struggling to build up their base of digital subscriber­s.

Many news outlets including The Times, Business Insider and Vice have laid off staff to cut costs.

Under the bill, news outlets would pay at least 70% of the money gained from the legislatio­n back to their staffs. Smaller outlets could pay a smaller percentage.

Google said it has partnered with more than 7,000 global news publishers through its Google News Initiative, including 6,000 journalist­s in California, but Zaidi said the company was pausing expansion of that initiative “until there’s clarity on California’s regulatory environmen­t.”

During an event Tuesday in the Bay Area, a reporter asked Gov. Gavin Newsom if he had a response to Google taking down California news links.

“We’re in conversati­ons with the company you referenced,” Newsom said. “Let’s leave it at that.”

Newsom has not yet taken a position on the California Journalism Preservati­on Act. It’s common for the governor to refrain from publicly sharing his position on a bill before it reaches his desk. A spokespers­on for the governor said Newsom is engaging with lawmakers about the bill.

Assemblyme­mber Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland), who introduced Assembly Bill 886, met with Newsom’s staff last week and “had a very constructi­ve conversati­on about AB 886,” said Erin Ivie, a spokespers­on for Wicks.

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