Thursday, April 9, 2020

Google ordered to pay for news taken from publishers in France


The French antitrust agency gave the Alphabet unit three months to thrash out deals with press publishers and agencies demanding talks on how to remunerate them for displaying their content.


Google was ordered by French antitrust regulators to pay publishers to display snippets of their articles after years of helping itself to excerpts for its own news service.
The French antitrust agency gave the Alphabet unit three months to thrash out deals with press publishers and agencies demanding talks on how to remunerate them for displaying their content.

The search engine giant may have abused its dominant market power, causing “serious and immediate harm” to the media, the Autorite de la concurrence warned in its statement on Thursday.

European publishers have been pushing regulators for over a decade to tackle the power of Google, which has lured away billions of euros in advertising revenue. This is the first time they have landed a punch. The EU has failed to act on complaints that Google unfairly displays publishers’ content.

“What’s clearly out of the question now is that the talks end with the same result as before: zero,” said Adrien Giraud, a lawyer who represents a grouping of newspapers, including Le Figaro, Les Echos and Le Monde. He says Google can expect publishers to reach out “as soon as this afternoon”.

The move is the latest crackdown on Silicon Valley by the French watchdog. Last month, Apple was fined a record ^1.1 billion ($1.2 billion) after the US tech giant was criticised for anti-competitive agreements with two distributors over the sale of non-iPhone products such as Apple Mac computers.

Google said it would comply with the French competition authority’s order, known as interim measures, and pointed out that it had already begun talks with publishing groups.


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