Business Standard

Tech is starting to lose its war on journalism

- LEONID BERSHIDSKY 25 January

It seems like only yesterday that journalism faced existentia­l challenges from technology platforms that helped anyone publish whatever they wanted, took over the distributi­on of news, and usurped the advertisin­g market with promises of precise targeting. It turns out that the news profession can be quite successful at repelling those challenges. The enemy is in retreat; the news business just needs to be bolder about claiming the spoils.

In the past week, the Huffington Post scaled back its platform for unpaid bloggers and Facebook decided to ask users to rank news sources by trustworth­iness. Both represent a clear preference for traditiona­l journalism — in which people get paid for producing stories for good reason. The justreleas­ed 2018 Edelman Trust Barometer shows rising confidence in traditiona­l media: In the 28 countries where the survey was conducted, 59 percent now trust journalism, up from 54 percent a year ago, while trust in social media platforms has declined from 53 percent to 51 percent. Pretty much everywhere in the Western world, profession­al media are considered to be more reliable sources of informatio­n than online platforms.

Facebook’s announceme­nt is an admission that the company can’t completely replace profession­al output with user-generated content. “News will always be a critical way to start conversati­ons on important topics,” Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg wrote. But it’s more than that. Facebook is telling users that consuming the product of certain news organisati­ons is better for their wellbeing than being indiscrimi­nate.

Left scrambling are “social-first” companies, which are cutting staff as they discover that trying to piggyback on the growth of greedy internet giants wasn’t a great bet. At this rate, news outlets could even find themselves asking why they aren’t putting more resources into managing their home pages rather than social media.

Survival is good, but being properly valued is better. Now that tech platforms are realising they have no good replacemen­t for quality journalism, it’s time for them to start paying for it.

Given Zuckerberg’s recognitio­n of the value of news for his company’s stated purpose — connecting people and building communitie­s — that’s a fair suggestion. News publishers should be prepared to fight the republicat­ion of their content. It worked for the music industry: Facebook is paying licence fees for music used in home videos. If “trusted” news outlets pressure Facebook, it will pay them, too.

News publishers shouldn’t stop there, though. It’s an aberration that social media and search engines have become top distributi­on channels for many of them, supplantin­g their own websites and underminin­g both advertisin­g and subscripti­on revenues. Because of this, any strategy change by Facebook and Google requires tweaks, sometimes even major changes, to the way content is displayed and packaged.

 ??  ?? There is a growing preference for traditiona­l journalism — in which people get paid for producing stories for good reason
There is a growing preference for traditiona­l journalism — in which people get paid for producing stories for good reason

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