Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Google hurts local news

- SEAN FISCHER, KOKIL JAIDKA AND YPHTACH LELKES

Across the United States, local news outlets are disappeari­ng. That’s a problem. Scholars find that local news organizati­ons strengthen democracy by boosting local involvemen­t in cities and towns, helping to hold officials accountabl­e, and reducing citizens’ partisan polarizati­on.

In their stead, a network of propaganda outlets has taken advantage of the gaps left behind, replacing local news outlets with deceptive and manipulati­ve media.

Congress may be interested in helping to secure the future of local media. Several members have called on Congress to form an expert commission to help tackle these problems.

Now more than ever, local news outlets rely on getting readers’ attention and generating online ad revenue. But in a new study in Nature Human Behaviour, we find that Google News is directing readers to large national outlets and away from local outlets.

We conducted an audit of Google News by examining the search results for different U.S. counties for a set of queries.

At the surface level, our results were clear. Searches for locally oriented queries returned more local outlets. Broadly oriented queries returned more national outlets.

However, researcher­s find that few people look beyond the first page of search; in fact, most people rarely even look past the first one or two links. Google News put far more national outlets at the top of the search results — even for local queries.

As an example, we examined the proportion of local and national search results for “early voting” that Google News returned Oct. 26, before the 2020 election. Certainly at least some people searching for that term hoped to get informatio­n about local or state early voting informatio­n.

However, only 20 percent of the top 10 returned searches were from local outlets. If readers kept scrolling past the 20th result, they would eventually find local outlets. But national outlets were the most common sources returned in the top results — and therefore more likely to be clicked.

In the top two results, national outlets’ stories appeared 56 percent of the time. Google News’ top pick was a national outlet almost 74

OPINION

percent of the time.

We considered whether the number of local news outlets available in a county would affect how many local news sources showed up in the search results.

It made no difference. You have the same chance of seeing a local outlet in your Google News search results if you live somewhere with no local news outlets, as is true in many rural communitie­s, or somewhere overflowin­g with local news, as in major metropolit­an areas.

So what does make the difference? Financiall­y stronger media sources with larger readership­s or followings are the ones more likely to be returned by Google News.

Why might this be true? First, it appears that Google News’ algorithms are tailored to put national outlets first. As a result, local news outlets are rarely high on the search page, even if topics are inherently local.

Second, Google News does not seem to deviate from its general pattern of favoring large national outlets, even on topics for which communitie­s may be looking for local news. This suggests the search algorithm does not consider context or topics, nor does it make any effort to help local news outlets place higher in search results.

We don’t know how or why social media companies decide to direct our attention. Americans increasing­ly turn to Facebook and other social media platforms to get their news. We know even less about how YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook’s algorithms determine what users see in their timelines, or how other news portals select and organize content.

Given the large share of Americans who rely on these platforms, their decisions could influence citizens’ news sources, political understand­ings, and general knowledge even more than Google News does.

Any effort to save local news might wish to consider how social media platforms direct Americans’ attention on their platforms.

Sean Fischer is a Ph.D. candidate at the Annenberg School for Communicat­ion at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Kokil Jaidka is an assistant professor at the Department of Communicat­ions and New Media at the National University of Singapore. Yphtach Lelkes is an assistant professor at the Annenberg School for Communicat­ion at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

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