New York Post

BIG TECH NEWS TAB

Google, Meta should pay $14B/yr.: researcher­s

- By THOMAS BARRABI

Google and Meta should be on the hook for at least $14 billion per year to news outlets to account for the ad revenue generated by their search traffic, according to a “conservati­ve” estimate released by Columbia University this month.

The researcher­s determined that Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook should pay publishers $1.9 billion per year for use of their content, while Sundar Pichai’s Google should pay between $10 billion and $12 billion per year.

Based on their total advertisin­g revenue, the figures would amount to 6.6% of Meta’s proceeds and 17.5% of Google Search’s proceeds.

“We find overwhelmi­ng evidence that the value of news is being appropriat­ed by Google and Meta in excess of long-standing norms of how jointly created surplus value should be shared,” researcher­s said in the white paper, which was published by Columbia University’s Initiative for Policy Dialogue.

The study surfaced as Big Tech firms resist efforts by lawmakers in the US, Canada and other countries to enact legislatio­n that would require them to share proceeds with publishers.

Pressure has increased since 2021, when Australia passed a law requiring tech firms to negotiate content deals with publishers.

Earlier this year, California lawmakers voted to advance the California Journalism Preservati­on Act, which would require “online platforms” to fork over a “journalism usage fee” to outlets whose content appears on their sites.

In August, Meta pulled news content from its platforms in Canada in response to a similar law.

Meanwhile, a bipartisan group of US lawmakers have proposed passage of the Journalism Competitio­n & Preservati­on Act, which would allow news publishers to collective­ly negotiate with Big Tech firms for use of their content.

The findings were based on estimates of search revenue that each platform received solely from news-related content.

The researcher­s analyzed “recent agreements between news outlets and Google and Meta (previously known as Facebook), as well as with a database of licensing agreements made over recent decades for similar content-based products.”

Using these agreements, the authors determined that a 50% share would be an industry norm “fair revenue split” between the tech platforms and publishers.

Debate’s ‘clear’

Rod Sims, the former chairman of the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission, told Semafor the study was “timely and very helpful.”

“It is clear on its assumption­s and methodolog­y, and so can promote a well-informed debate on what Google and Meta owe publishers for their news media content. Their approach is logical,” he said. “The debate is no longer over whether the platforms should pay, but about how much.”

Google spokeswoma­n Jenn Crider pushed back on the study, arguing it is “based on inaccurate assumption­s, debunked data, and basic errors, in support of a biased conclusion.”

“In reality, less than 2% of all Searches are news related and we don’t run ads or make money on the vast majority of them,” Crider said.

Meta declined to comment.

 ?? ?? Google, led by Sundar Pichai (left), and Meta, led by Mark Zuckerberg (right), owe news outlets major coin, per a study.
Google, led by Sundar Pichai (left), and Meta, led by Mark Zuckerberg (right), owe news outlets major coin, per a study.
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