Hindustan Times (East UP)

‘Google must pay newspapers for content’

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NEW DELHI: The Indian Newspaper Society (INS) on Thursday asked Google to compensate Indian newspapers for using their content and insisted that the global search giant increase the publisher share of advertisin­g revenue to 85 per cent.

In a letter to Google, INS president L Adimoolam said publishers are also facing a very opaque advertisin­g system, as they are unable to get details of Google’s advertisin­g value chain. “The Society insisted that Google should increase the publisher share of advertisin­g revenue to 85 percent, and also ensure more transparen­cy in the revenue reports provided to publishers by Google,” the INS said in a statement.

It noted that, over the past year publishers across the world have been raising the issue of fair payment for content and of proper sharing of advertisin­g revenue with Google.

It is also noted that Google has recently agreed to better compensate and pay publishers in France, the European Union and notably in Australia.

In a letter addressed to Google

India’s country manager Sanjay Gupta, the INS president demanded that Google should pay for news generated by the newspapers which employ thousands of journalist­s on the ground, at considerab­le expense, for gathering and verifying informatio­n.

“Since, the content which is generated and published by newspapers at considerab­le expense is proprietar­y, the Society pointed out that it is this credible content which has given Google the authentici­ty in India ever since its inception,” the INS said.

It pointed out that publishers have been providing complete access to “quality journalism with credible news, current affairs, analysis, informatio­n and entertainm­ent”, and “there is a huge distinctio­n between the editorial content from quality publicatio­ns and fake news that is spreading on other informatio­n platforms”.

Further, it was also pointed out that advertisin­g has been the financial backbone of the news industry. However, newspaper publishers are seeing their share of the advertisin­g pie shrinking in the digital space, even as Google is taking a “giant share of advertisin­g spends”, leaving publishers with a small share, it said.

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