Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Google signs deal to provide payments to French publishers

The US tech giant and a group of French newspapers said their agreement calls for payments made for showing content through online searches. The first-in-Euorpe pact follows several months of negotiatio­ns.

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In a European first, Google and a group of French newspapers said Thursday they had signed an agreement to pave the way to the online giant offering them digital copyright payments.

Google has only signed individual agreements with a few publicatio­ns so far, including national dailies Le Monde and Le Figaro.

The agreement, signed with French publishers' lobby Alliance de la Presse d'Informatio­n Générale (APIG), involves "neighborin­g rights," which call for payment for showing news content through internet searches, according to a joint statement.

Google to work out individual agreements

The pact establishe­s a framework for Google to negotiate individual license agreements with newspapers on the payments. It will also give papers access to its new News Showcase Program, which sees it pay publishers for enriched content.

The payments will be based on criteria such as the daily volume of publicatio­ns, monthly internet traffic and "contributi­on to political and general informatio­n."

Google and APIG did not state how much money could be distribute­d under the agreement, and details on exactly how the payments will be calculated were not disclosed.

APIG head Pierre Louette said the deal amounts to the "effective recognitio­n of neighborin­g rights for the press and the start of their remunerati­on by digital platforms for the use of their publicatio­ns online."

Product of months of talks

The move follows months of negotiatio­ns between Google, French publishers and news agencies over how to apply updated EU copyright rules, which allow publishers to demand a fee from online platforms showing excerpts of their news.

A Paris appeals court ruled in October that Google had to continue to negotiate with French news publishers over a new European law on copyrights.

News outlets have consistent­ly opposed Google's failure to offer them compensati­on for the millions it makes from ads displayed alongside news search results. France was the first country in the EU to enact the new law, but Google initially refused to comply, saying that publishers already benefit by receiving millions of visits to their websites.

 ??  ?? News outlets have consistent­ly opposed Google's failure to offer compensati­on
News outlets have consistent­ly opposed Google's failure to offer compensati­on

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