Qatar Tribune

Google rejects call for huge Australian media payout

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GOOGLE has rejected demands it pay hundreds of millions of dollars per year in compensati­on to Australian news media under a government-imposed revenue sharing deal.

The company’s top executive in Australia said Google made barely Aus$10 million (US$6.7 million) per year from news-linked advertisin­g, a fraction of a government watchdog’s estimates for the sector.

In an effort being closely watched around the world, Australia is set to unveil plans to force major internet firms to share advertisin­g revenue they earn from news featured in their services.

The country’s competitio­n regulator, the ACCC, has estimated that Google and Facebook together earn some Aus$6 billion (US$4 billion) per year from advertisin­g in Australia.

Leading news publishers have demanded the two companies pay at least 10 percent of that money each year to local news organisati­ons, which they say have lost the vast majority of their advertisin­g revenue to the global technology giants.

Mel Silva, Google’s managing director for Australia, dismissed such figures as wildly unrealisti­c.

“We all agree that highqualit­y news has great social value, but we need to understand the economics as well,” Silva said in a blog post Sunday.

She said Google last year earned just Aus$10 million in revenue from clicks on ads placed next to news-related search queries.

“The bulk of our revenue comes not from news queries, but from queries with commercial intent, as when someone searches for ‘running shoes’ and then clicks on an ad,” she said.

Silva also denied ACCC arguments that the tech firms gain significan­t “indirect benefits” from displaying news since the content draws users to their platforms.

News “represents only a tiny number of queries” on Google, accounting last year for barely one percent of actions on Google Search in Australia, she said. The Google executive said her company on the other hand provided Australia’s news media with “substantia­l” value by sending people to their websites.

“To put it plainly, a lot of people (Australian­s and beyond) click from Google through to Australian news websites, which gives publishers the chance to make money by showing them ads or turning them into paying subscriber­s,” she said.

She said Google search accounted for 3.44 billion visits to large and small Australian news publishers in 2018, valuing those referrals at more than Aus$200 million per year for the news companies.

Google’s position bodes ill for negotiatio­ns which the ACCC hopes to pursue between Google, Facebook and Australian media companies over a mandatory “code of conduct” governing issues such as revenue sharing, curbing disinforma­tion and protecting user privacy. The regulator suggested last month that Australian publishers might need to organise a “collective boycott” of Google and Facebook if voluntary negotiatio­ns on the code of conduct fail.

The company’s top executive in Australia said Google made barely Aus$10 million (US$6.7 million) per year from news-linked advertisin­g, a fraction of a government watchdog’s estimates for the sector.

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