|
Press
Releases
8/31/2007
Google begins hosting content from 4 news
services on its own site
By MICHAEL LIEDTKE
AP Business Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Internet search leader Google
Inc. began hosting material produced by The Associated Press
and three other news services on its own Web site instead
of only sending readers to other destinations.
The change that started Friday affects hundreds of stories
and photographs distributed each day by the AP, Agence France-Presse,
The Press Association in the United Kingdom and The Canadian
Press. It could diminish Internet traffic to other media sites
where those stories and photos are also found – a development
that could reduce the online advertising revenue of newspapers
and broadcasters.
Google negotiated licensing deals with the AP and French news
agency during the past two years after the services raised
concerns about whether the search engine had been infringing
on their copyrights. The company also reached licensing agreements
with The Press Association and The Canadian Press during the
same period.
Financial terms of those deals have not been disclosed.
The new approach does not change the look of Google News or
affect the way the section treats material produced by other
media.
Although Google already had bought the right to display content
produced by all four news services, the search engine's news
section had continued to link to other Web sites to read the
stories and look at the photographs.
That helped drive more online traffic to newspapers and
broadcasters who pay annual fees to help finance the AP, a
161-year-old cooperative owned by news organizations.
Now, Google visitors interested in reading an AP story will
remain on Google's Web site unless they click on a link that
enables them to read the same story elsewhere. Google does
not have any immediate plans to run ads alongside the news
hosted on its site.
Although the change might not even be noticed by many Google
users, the decision to corral the content from the AP and
other news services may irritate U.S. publishers and broadcasters
if the move results in less traffic for them and more for
Internet's most powerful company.
A diminished audience would likely translate into less online
revenue, compounding the financial headaches of long-established
media already scrambling to make up for the money that has
been lost as more advertisers shift their spending to the
Internet.
Google has been the trend's biggest beneficiary because it
runs the Internet's largest advertising network. In the first
half of this year, the 9-year-old company earned $1.9 billion
(euro1.4 billion) on revenue of $7.5 billion (euro5.5 billion).
Despite Google's dominance in search, its news section lags
behind several other rivals. In July, Google News attracted
9.6 million visitors compared with Yahoo News' industry-leading
audience of 33.8 million, according to comScore Media Metrix.
Yahoo Inc., along with other major Web sites such as Microsoft
Corp.'s MSN and Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, have been featuring
AP material for years.
Under its new approach, Google reasons readers would not
have to pore through search results listing the same story
posted on different sites. That should in turn make it easier
to discover other news stories at other Web sites that might
previously have been buried, said Josh Cohen, the business
product manager for Google News.
"This may result in certain publishers losing traffic
for their news wire stories, but it will allow more room for
their original content," Cohen said.
Vlae Kershner, news director for the San Francisco Chronicle's
Web site, backed up that theory, saying Google News mostly
refers readers interested in the newspaper's staff-written
stories. "This is going to have a very minimal impact
on our traffic," he said.
Referrals from Google News accounted for 2.2 percent of the
traffic at newspaper Web sites during the week ending Aug.
25, according to the research firm Hitwise.
Caroline Little, chief executive and publisher of Washingtonpost.Newsweek
Interactive, said she worries about anything that might erode
her site's advertising revenue. "That's how we make money,"
she said. "We will be watching this carefully."
For its part, the AP intends to work with Google to ensure
readers find their way to breaking news stories on its members'
Web sites, said Jane Seagrave, the AP's vice president of
new media markets.
In recognition of the challenges facing the media, the AP
froze its basic rates for member newspapers and broadcasters
in the U.S. this year.
That concession has intensified the pressure on AP to plumb
new revenue channels by selling its content to so-called "commercial"
customers on the Web. Those efforts helped the not-for-profit
AP boost its revenue by 4 percent last year to $680 million
(euro496 million).
"AP relies on its commercial agreements to help pay
the enormous costs of covering breaking news around the world,
ranging from deadly hurricanes and tsunamis to conflicts like
the war in Iraq," Seagrave said.
|