Google to Pay News Corp for Access to Its Publications' Content
February 17 2021 - 3:36PM
Dow Jones News
By Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg and Keach Hagey
News Corp reached a three-year deal with Alphabet Inc.'s Google
to license content from its publications and produce new audio and
video products for Google platforms, News Corp said Wednesday.
Google is paying the media company tens of millions of dollars
over the course of the deal, according to a person familiar with
the matter.
Don Harrison, Google's president of global partnerships, said
content from News Corp publications would be available on several
platforms, including a new product called Google News Showcase.
News Corp owns The Wall Street Journal and news organizations in
the U.K. and Australia.
News Corp will also make new podcasts that will be available
through Google's voice-assistant technology and new videos for
YouTube, the technology company's video-streaming service. The
audio and video content won't be exclusive to Google, the person
familiar with the matter said.
The agreement will have "a positive impact on journalism around
the globe as we have firmly established that there should be a
premium for premium journalism," News Corp Chief Executive Officer
Robert Thomson said in a statement.
Executives at major news organizations -- including News Corp --
have long criticized Google for using news content in its products
without paying the publishers that provide it. Google has argued
that it benefits publishers by sending them traffic and until
recently has resisted paying news organizations licensing fees for
their articles.
The deal comes as the Australian Parliament began debate on
legislation intended to compel digital platforms to negotiate to
pay for news.
Facebook Inc. said separately Wednesday that, as a result of the
legislation, it would restrict publishers and people in Australia
from sharing or viewing Australian and international news
content.
Google News Showcase, which has yet to launch in the U.S., will
display summaries of news articles from a variety of publishers.
Users who click on them will be taken directly to news
organizations' websites. The program first launched in Germany and
Brazil and has since expanded to other countries including France
and Australia. Mr. Harrison said News Showcase already had
partnerships with more than 500 publications around the world.
Google last year said it would pay publishers a total of more
than $1 billion for three years to license news content.
News Corp properties that will join Google News Showcase include
the Journal, Barron's, MarketWatch and the New York Post; the
Times, the Sunday Times, and the Sun in the U.K.; and the
Australian, news.com.au, Sky News, and multiple metropolitan and
local titles in Australia, the company said Wednesday. The
publishers will offer a limited number of their paywalled stories
to Google users free through News Showcase as part of the
agreement.
News Corp has been looking to compete with Google News,
launching news aggregator Knewz.com in early 2020.
News Corp will create content for YouTube and will get both
licensing fees and a share of advertising revenue, according to the
person familiar with the matter.
The media company also has agreed to create content for Google's
voice-assistant technology, primarily through its expanding podcast
offerings and U.K.-based radio and digital-audio division Wireless
Group, the person said. Google will pay licensing fees for this
audio content as well, the person said.
Jason Kint, CEO of Digital Content Next, a trade organization
that represents publishers, said News Corp's deal with Google shows
the importance of laws that allow publishers to be compensated
fairly by tech platforms such as Facebook and Google. Mr. Kint
supports the Australian legislation, which he said would put
publishers and tech companies on more equal footing during
negotiations.
"You can correlate Google's News Showcase deals to where they
actually have regulatory risks or new laws that force them to the
table," Mr. Kint said, referring to Google's licensing efforts in
France and Germany, where Google has faced organized bargaining
efforts from publishers.
Other tech giants have moved to pay for news content in recent
years. In 2019, Facebook said it would pay news organizations
including the Journal -- in some cases millions of dollars a year
-- to license their headlines and story summaries for a news
service. Also that year, Apple Inc. launched its own news app,
Apple News+, which for $9.99 a month provides access to articles
from hundreds of magazines and news organizations including the
Journal.
--Benjamin Mullin contributed to this article.
Write to Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg at jeffrey.trachtenberg@wsj.com
and Keach Hagey at keach.hagey@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 17, 2021 15:21 ET (20:21 GMT)
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