Federal government reaches deal with Google on Online News Act

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
43,309
Reputation
7,302
Daps
132,260




Federal government reaches deal with Google on Online News Act


Agreement comes 3 weeks before Online News Act rules come into force



Daniel Thibeault, David Cochrane, Darren Major · CBC News · Posted: Nov 29, 2023 10:42 AM EST | Last Updated: November 29

A close-up image of a mobile phone shows several social media apps including Facebook, Google, Twitter and Instagram.

Facebook, Instagram, Google and Twitter app icons appear on an iPhone screen. (Shutterstock/Primakov)


Social Sharing

1295

comments

Google and the federal government have reached an agreement in their dispute over the Online News Act that would see Google continue to share Canadian news online in return for the company making annual payments to news companies in the range of $100 million.

Sources told Radio-Canada and CBC News earlier Wednesday that an agreement had been reached. Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge confirmed the news Wednesday afternoon.

"Many doubted that we would be successful, but I was confident we would find a way to address Google's concerns," she told reporters outside the House of Commons.

A woman in a grey blazer speaks to at a microphone outside the House of Commons.

Canadian Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge speaks with reporters in the Foyer of the House of Commons, Wednesday, November 29, 2023 in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The federal government and Google agreed on the regulatory framework earlier this week, a government source familiar with the talks told Radio-Canada.

The federal government had estimated earlier this year that Google's compensation should amount to about $172 million. Google estimated the value at $100 million.


Simplified negotiations

Along with the financial demands, Google had expressed concerns about what spokesperson Shay Purdy called "critical structural issues" with the Online News Act, also called Bill C-18.

The company said it would not have a mandatory negotiation model imposed on it for talks with Canadian media organizations, preferring to deal with a single point of contact.

The new regulations will allow Google to negotiate with a single group that would represent all media, allowing the company to limit its arbitration risk.



Kent Walker, Google's president of global affairs, thanked St-Onge for addressing the company's concerns.

"We are pleased that the Government of Canada has committed to addressing our core issues with Bill C-18," Walker said in a statement. "

The rules will be added to the C-18 legislative framework, which must be unveiled by mid-December.

Google would still be required to negotiate with the media and sign an agreement. The digital giant could also add additional service contributions, which have yet to be specified.

Google had threatened to block Canadian news content on its platforms as a result of the legislation. But unlike Meta, which ended its talks with the government last summer and stopped distributing Canadian news on Facebook and Instagram, Google has not blocked news in Canada.


A discount deal?

Faced with Google's threat to stop distributing Canadian news, the government seems to have softened its position.

But the government source argues that an agreement constitutes a victory and a net gain for Canadian media. The framework for a single negotiation is likely to serve as an example for other countries, the source added.

St-Onge said the deal with Google could be reopened if other countries introduce their own legislation and reach more favourable deals with the tech giant.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the agreement was "very good news."

"After months of holding strong, of demonstrating our commitment to local journalism, to strong independent journalists getting paid for their work ... Google has agreed to properly support journalists, including local journalism," he said on his way into Wednesday's question period.

WATCH | Prime Minister Trudeau welcomes deal with Google:

CP169313064.JPG

Trudeau says Google has agreed to 'properly support' journalism

1 day ago

Duration0:45

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he welcomes news that Ottawa has reached a deal on online news with Google. He argues Facebook's parent company Meta continues to 'abdicate any responsibility' in the matter.

Bill C-18 applies to digital platforms with 20 million unique monthly users and annual revenues of $1 billion. Only Meta and Google meet those criteria.

Meta's talks with the government have not resumed. When asked if those negotiations could be reopened, St-Onge said it's up to Meta.

"This [deal with Google] shows that this legislation works," she said. "Now it's on Facebook to explain why they're leaving their platform to disinformation and misinformation instead of sustaining our news system."

A Meta spokesperson told CBC News it doesn't plan to allow news on its platforms in Canada while the Online News Act is law.

"Unlike search engines, we do not proactively pull news from the internet to place in our users' feeds and we have long been clear that the only way we can reasonably comply with the Online News Act is by ending news availability for people in Canada," the spokesperson said in an email.

A smiling man wearing glasses.

Jeff Elgie is the CEO of Sault Ste. Marie based Village Media, which now operates 13 news web sites across Ontario. (Village Media)

Jeff Elgie — CEO of Village Media, which runs 25 community news websites across the country — said he was happy that Google reached a deal with the government. But he added it could have happened sooner if the government had indicated from the beginning that it would allow tech giants to negotiate with a single collective of news outlets rather than individually.

"We've created a fixed pool, or a fund model, that's going to now be distributed centrally by one bargaining unit, in proportion to the number of journalists that the members have. Which is what we thought this should be and what Google and Meta thought this should be all along," he said.

"If the Act had just said that from the beginning, I think everyone would have been happy. Meta wouldn't have left. This would have happened much more quickly."

WATCH | Heritage minister discusses deal with Google:

CP167311177.jpg

Ottawa reaches $100M deal with Google on Online News Act

1 day ago

Duration9:52

Google and the federal government have reached an agreement in their dispute over the Online News Act. The $100 million deal comes three weeks before Bill C-18 is set to come into effect. Google originally threatened to follow in the footsteps of Meta, which blocked news content on Facebook and Instagram in response to the legislation. Power & Politics speaks to Canada's minister of heritage.

As a news organization, CBC/Radio-Canada could see a financial benefit under C-18, which includes a requirement for CBC to provide an annual report on any compensation for news it receives from digital operators.

St-Onge said Wednesday that CBC's eligibility under the bill will become clearer when regulations are released ahead of the bill coming into force on Dec. 19.

Leon Mar, CBC's director of media relations, welcomed the government's agreement with Google.

"This agreement marks a very important step towards building a healthy news ecosystem for Canadians," Mar said in a media statement. "We look forward to the next steps in these discussions."
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
43,309
Reputation
7,302
Daps
132,260

Why the California Journalism Preservation Act is putting support of the news ecosystem at risk​

Apr 12, 2024

2 min read

Jaffer Zaidi
VP, Global News Partnerships





https://policies.google.com/privacy

Listen to article 4 minutes

A pending bill in the California state legislature, the California Journalism Preservation Act (CJPA), would create a “link tax” that would require Google to pay for simply connecting Californians to news articles. We have long said that this is the wrong approach to supporting journalism. If passed, CJPA may result in significant changes to the services we can offer Californians and the traffic we can provide to California publishers.

By helping people find news stories, we help publishers of all sizes grow their audiences at no cost to them. CJPA would up-end that model. It would favor media conglomerates and hedge funds—who’ve been lobbying for this bill—and could use funds from CJPA to continue to buy up local California newspapers, strip them of journalists, and create more ghost papers that operate with a skeleton crew to produce only low-cost, and often low-quality, content. CJPA would also put small publishers at a disadvantage and limit consumers’ access to a diverse local media ecosystem.

As we’ve shared when other countries have considered similar proposals, the uncapped financial exposure created by CJPA would be unworkable. If enacted, CJPA in its current form would create a level of business uncertainty that no company could accept. To prepare for possible CJPA implications, we are beginning a short-term test for a small percentage of California users. The testing process involves removing links to California news websites, potentially covered by CJPA, to measure the impact of the legislation on our product experience. Until there’s clarity on California’s regulatory environment, we’re also pausing further investments in the California news ecosystem, including new partnerships through Google News Showcase, our product and licensing program for news organizations, and planned expansions of the Google News Initiative.

A better approach​

To be clear, we believe CJPA undermines news in California. We don’t take these decisions lightly and want to be transparent with California publishers, lawmakers, and our users. To avoid an outcome where all parties lose and the California news industry is left worse off, we urge lawmakers to take a different approach.

For more than two decades, we’ve provided substantial support to help news publishers navigate the changing digital landscape and innovate. We’ve rolled out Google News Showcase, which operates in 26 countries, including the U.S., and has more than 2,500 participating publications. Through the Google News Initiative we’ve partnered with more than 7,000 news publishers around the world, including 200 news organizations and 6,000 journalists in California alone.

These investments in the news ecosystem are geared towards helping journalists and news publishers evolve in response to the rapidly changing way people are looking for and consuming information. It’s well known that people are getting news from sources like short-form video, topical newsletters, social media, and curated podcasts, and many are avoiding the news entirely. In line with those trends, just 2% of queries on Google Search are news-related. Nevertheless, we want to continue making targeted contributions to the news ecosystem to help news publishers navigate this inflection point. CJPA as currently constructed would end these investments.

We’ve been engaging with California publishers and lawmakers throughout the legislative process and have proposed reasonable and balanced alternatives to CJPA. A healthy news industry in California will require support from both the California government and a broad base of private companies. This support should involve predictable, broad-based contributions, structured in ways that do not harm smaller, local publishers to benefit the largest players and hedge fund owners. It must also maintain the principles of the open web, which is critical to ensuring news publishers can connect with people for free.

Looking ahead, we will continue our efforts to work with lawmakers on alternative paths that will allow us to continue linking to news and supporting the news ecosystem in California.


















 
Top