San Francisco Chronicle

Google updates news paywall policy

-

NEW YORK — Google will try to help newspapers and other publishers boost subscripti­ons by ending a decadeold policy that required them to provide a limited amount of free content before people were asked to pay for it.

The “first click free” policy at the world’s biggest search engine was loathed by publishers because while the stories, videos and images appearing on Google have been free for its users, it is expensive to produce.

Publishers had been required to provide at least three free items under the search engine’s previous policy.

Publishers will now be allowed to decide how many, if any, free articles they want to offer readers before charging a fee, Richard Gingras, vice president of news at Google Inc., wrote Monday in a company blog post.

For people who intentiona­lly sought to skirt paywalls, the policy allowed readers to type a headline into Google and get free access to a story without having it count against a monthly free article limit, said Kinsey Wilson, an adviser to New York Times CEO Mark Thompson.

In months of testing with Google, reducing those free clicks from three to zero “generally improved” conversion to subscripti­ons, Wilson said. But he added that the Times continues to assess whether to actually reduce the number of free clicks now that it can. He said it was “not simply a mechanical decision” because the Times’ mission is in part to make sure its news is available to a wide audience and to set the news agenda.

Among the changes announced by Google:

Click for free is over. Publishers decide what and if they want to provide for free.

Google will produce a suite of products and services to broaden the audience for publishers

in an attempt to drive subscripti­ons and revenue.

Streamline payment methods so that readers can tailor their own experience. That would include access to a publicatio­n’s digital content with one click. That content could then be accessed anywhere — whether it’s on a publisher’s website or mobile app, or on Google Newsstand, Google Search or Google News.

Newspapers and magazines have shut down in droves or they have been force to shrink operations drasticall­y worldwide because of the influx of stories, images and video jettisoned across the Internet, largely at no charge. Technologi­cal changes have fractured the advertisin­g market and constraine­d revenue for almost all establishe­d media.

The relationsh­ip between Google and publishers is complex. With readers opening tablets and phones rather than picking up a newspaper from the stoop or lawn, Google has vexed publishers as it gobbles up advertisin­g dollars for content produced by those publishers.

But they need powerful search engines to spread their content and gain readers as they transition to digital.

A Pew Research Center analysis of data from AAM shows that total weekday circulatio­n for U.S. daily newspapers — both print and digital — fell 8 percent in 2016, marking the 28th consecutiv­e year of declines. But digital subscripti­ons are rising rapidly for major establishe­d newspapers.

In July, news outlets sought permission from Congress for the right to negotiate jointly with Google and Facebook, given the pair’s dominance in online advertisin­g and online news traffic. The News Media Alliance, which represents, nearly 2,000 news organizati­ons, said that because Google and Facebook are so dominant, news publishers are forced to “surrender their content and play by their rules on how news and informatio­n is displayed, prioritize­d and monetized.”

Publishers want stronger protection­s for intellectu­al property, support for subscripti­on models and a bigger share of the online advertisin­g market. Google and Facebook combined will account for 60 percent of the U.S. digital advertisin­g market this year, according to the research firm eMarketer.

Google decided to offer more flexibilit­y to publishers based on additional research, feedback from publishers, and extended experiment­s with the New York Times and Financial Times, Gingras said.

Google says it’s working with publishers to streamline whatever payment form they would like to pursue so that it’s easier for users to decide what they wish to pay for. The goal is to help publishers identify possible subscriber­s and build a better subscripti­on model, Google said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States