French Publishers Forge Deal With Google, Breaking Ranks With Europe
Pool photo by Philippe Wojazer
By ERIC PFANNER
Published: February 17, 2013
PARIS — Publishers in France say they have struck an innovative agreement with Google
on the use of their content online. Their counterparts elsewhere in
Europe, however, say the French gave in too easily to the Internet
giant.
The deal was signed this month by President François Hollande
of France and Eric E. Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, who
called it a breakthrough in the tense relationship between publishers
and Google, and as a possible model for other countries to follow.
Under the deal, Google agreed to set up a fund, worth 60 million euroes,
or $80 million, over three years, to help publishers develop their
digital units. The two sides also pledged to deepen business ties, using
Google’s online tools, in an effort to generate more online revenue for
the publishers, who have struggled to counteract dwindling print
revenue.
But the French group, representing newspaper and magazine publishers
with an online presence, as well as a variety of other news-oriented Web
sites, yielded on its most important demand: that Google and other
search engines and “aggregators” of news should start paying for links
to their content.
Google, which insists that its links provide a service to publishers by
directing traffic to their sites, had fiercely resisted any change in
the principle of free linking.
The agreement dismayed members of the European Publishers Council, a
lobbying group in Brussels, which has been pushing for a fundamental
change in the relationship between publishers and Google. The group
criticized the French publishers for breaking ranks and striking a
separate business agreement that has no statutory standing.
The deal “does not address the continuing problem of unauthorized reuse
and monetization of content, and so does not provide the online press
with the financial certainty or mechanisms for legal redress which it
needs to build sustainable business models and ensure its continued
investment in high-quality content,” Angela Mills Wade, executive
director of the publishers council, said in a statement.
German publishers were also scornful, with Anja Pasquay, a spokeswoman
for the German Newspaper Publishers’ Association, saying: “Obviously the
French position isn’t one that we would favor. This is not the solution
for Germany.”
Germany has been in the forefront of the push to get Google to share
with online news publishers some of the billions of euros that the
company earns from the sale of advertising. A proposed law, endorsed by
the government of Chancellor Angela Merkel and working its way through
the federal legislature, would grant a new form of copyright to digital
publishers. If enacted, it could allow publishers to charge search
engines or aggregators for displaying even snippets of news articles
alongside links to other Web sites.
Mr. Hollande had vowed to introduce similar legislation this winter if
Google and the publishers did not come to terms. It appears that Google,
which had threatened to stop indexing French Web sites’ content if it
had to pay for links, has sidelined the threat of legislation, at least
for now; the agreement will be reviewed after three years, Mr. Hollande
has said.
Under the deal, Google says it will help the publishers use several of
its digital advertising services, including AdSense, AdMob and Ad
Exchange, more effectively.
Publishers are already free to use these services, and it was not
immediately clear how they would be able to generate more revenue from
them; this part of the accord remains confidential, both sides say,
because they are still negotiating the fine print.
“This agreement can help accelerate the move toward greater advertising
revenues in the digital world,” said Marc Schwartz of Mazars, a
consulting firm, who is serving as an independent mediator in the talks.
“I’m not saying we have done everything, but it’s a first step in the
right direction.”
More has been said about the planned innovation fund. Publishers will
submit proposals to the fund, which will select ideas to finance and
develop, with the involvement of Google engineers.
“The idea is that it would inject innovation into the sector in France,”
said Simon Morrison, copyright policy manager at Google.
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