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A lifeline for news

To make big tech firms pay

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Australia’s proposal for the news they link to is being closely watched by many countries as a way to facilitate the digital transition that publishers without a clear revenue model have begun.

APROCESS started four years back by the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) could offer support to a struggling global news business. The process, which is meant to curb Internet firms from freeriding on news they do not generate, is expected to culminate in legislatio­n that would require search engines and social media platforms, which curate access to news, to pay publishers whose stories and content they link and direct users to.

The proposed code requires Google and Facebook to enter into negotiatio­ns with media firms to arrive at the terms on which they can link readers to news stories generated by these publishers. If no agreement emerges, the matter compulsori­ly goes to an arbitrator, who will choose between the offers made by the two parties. While this requiremen­t will initially affect Google and Facebook, it is likely to eventually cover the likes of Apple News.

The big, so-called “tech”, companies will also have to inform publishers in advance of any significan­t changes to algorithms they use to choose the news outlets and stories they link to in response to implicit or explicit queries. These two requiremen­ts are linked. Algorithms determine the nature of online traffic in news, influencin­g which publicatio­ns and stories receive reader attention. Evidence shows that algorithmi­c interventi­on drives readers to a few publicatio­ns, and focuses attention on a few “top” stories, often concealing the diversity in news components, outlets, and coverage that at least some publishers may privilege.

The focus on individual stories also dilutes the overall image of itself that a publicatio­n may create to enhance its readership. More importantl­y, the way algorithms curate news may also be influenced by the objective with which they are constructe­d, which in the case of the Silicon Valley giants is to derive profit, by, for example, serving as an echo chamber to increase traffic, or using the informatio­n that news interest provides to profile readers and help advertiser­s target potential clients. Recognisin­g this, leading publishers are developing their own algorithms to meet reader requiremen­ts and reflect their journalist­ic priorities. But these are not the primary routes to access news online.

The influence of Internet intermedia­ries over reader traffic also adversely affects the commercial interests of news organisati­ons. In a much-discussed revenue model developed over time, news organisati­ons covered their costs and made their profits from advertisin­g revenue rather than reader subscripti­ons or purchases. That model has, for many years now, been under challenge, with advertisin­g revenues, especially for print publicatio­ns, collapsing. But this is not because advertisin­g spending has collapsed. Rather, the problem is that over time, the share of advertisin­g spending absorbed initially by television and subsequent­ly by search engines like Google and social media intermedia­ries like Facebook has increased exponentia­lly.

According to sources quoted by Financial Times, in 1998, when Google came into existence, newspathe

pers and magazines received almost 50 per cent of advertisin­g expenditur­e worldwide. In 2020, that share had fallen to just a little more than 8 per cent of a close-to-$580 billion advertisin­g pie. And even when print publicatio­ns choose to establish an online digital presence, they do not seem to acquire a reasonable share of online advertisin­g.

The ACCC reportedly found that online advertisin­g in Australia was concentrat­ed with Google, which received 53 per cent of the total, and Facebook (28 per cent), leaving less than a fifth for the rest, including the online versions of print publicatio­ns.

PAYWALLS

In recent times, in search of a revenue model, many leading publicatio­ns have set up paywalls to force readers to subscribe. Barring a couple of successes, such as that of Financial Times and The New York Times, this has only reduced readership in most cases. Moreover, readers attracted by the snippets Google provides to direct them to particular paywalled stories, search for alternativ­e coverage of the stories involved, encouragin­g the algorithm to drive traffic to those free sources, which are normally provided by smaller publishers.

So, establishe­d news publishers are losing out on multiple counts. They lose out on advertisin­g revenues that accrue to the platforms. Their experiment­s with subscripti­on-based revenue models are undermined. And they see readers migrating to publicatio­ns that provide free access but may be spending much less on generating quality editorial content.

The power of search engines and social media platforms has long been recognised. But efforts to rein them in have been geared to challengin­g their monopoly through anti-trust and competitio­n-enhancing interventi­ons, in the European Union, the United States and elsewhere. Success on that ongoing effort has thus far been limited. In that background, the proposed Australian interventi­on is innovative and likely to be effective if implemente­d.

The stated objective is to stop unfair practices that are killing the quality journalism that is crucial to a vibrant democracy. As the Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz put it: “Facebook and Google are trying to freeride: it suits them to let someone else pay for the production of news while they reap most of the advertisin­g revenue. This is not viable: without funding for quality journalism, misinforma­tion, disinforma­tion and low-quality journalism will prevail. Our society will be worse off.” In that vein, Rod Sims, who chairs the ACCC, has argued that the proposed interventi­on aims to correct a power imbalance between the news media and Internet firms, since “a healthy news media sector is essential to a well-functionin­g democracy”.

The initial response from Google and Facebook to the ACCC’S proposals was aggressive, with Google threatenin­g to close access to its search engine in Australia, and Facebook declaring that it would be forced to prevent sharing of news through its platforms, including Instagram. If Google search is cut off, it could adversely affect businesses, especially small players, that rely on the search engine to connect them to their clients. But the threats do not seem to be working. Nor is a campaign that suggests that the move to curb the Internet firms is driven by the closeness of the conservati­ve government to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, which dominates the Australian news business. The Australian parliament seems set to pass the code.

More disturbing for Google and Facebook are signs that the Australian example may be followed by the European Union, where other efforts to rein in the giants have not yielded much results, and discussion on legislatio­n governing digital services and markets is still on. Authoritie­s in Canada and even the United States are also reportedly examining the Australian code. Also, the software major Microsoft, whose Bing search engine currently has a minuscule 3.6 per cent share in Australia’s Internet search market (as against Google’s 94.5 per cent), has decided to exploit the situation. It has supported the proposal to make tech firms pay for news they link to or help share and has offered to help small businesses switch to Bing without cost in case Google exits in protest.

These developmen­ts have prompted Google to adopt a parallel strategy in which it agrees to pay for news, but on terms determined by it rather than the leading media publishers or government agencies. The search provider has declared that it intends to spend around $1 billion over three years to license news and has begun striking deals, especially with smaller publishers, in some jurisdicti­ons. Google claims to have already sealed 450 agreements worldwide. The most recent is a deal with Seven West Media, a significan­t news publishing group in Australia with 21 outlets, in which Google will make a “fair payment” for use of the publisher’s material.

GOOGLE NEWS SHOWCASE

These deals are being forged under a new initiative titled Google News Showcase, which is to be initially available on mobile platforms. The Showcase will present publisherc­urated news through Google News, initially on Android phones, then on devices using Apple’s IOS and finally on Google search. But sceptics say that this effort of Google’s is aimed at dividing the news business and that the sums involved in the deals are extremely low.

The current state of play notwithsta­nding, the interventi­on by the Australian authoritie­s has initiated changes and unleashed conflicts that can potentiall­y be transforma­tive. The change may not guarantee a future for print resembling its business in the past. But it could facilitate the digital transition that publishers have begun without any clear revenue model other than subscripti­on. The limited success with that model had triggered discussion­s on whether government or philanthro­pic support can help sustain quality journalism. If reasonable revenue sharing between Internet firms and media houses can be ensured, there can possibly be an advertisin­g supported digital future for quality news, even if in a substantia­lly contracted media space. $

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