The Era of Free News for Facebook and Google May Soon Be Over
(Bloomberg) -- Facebook and
Google have for years operated like shop windows for news stories, plying their
billions of visitors with free snippets and information from articles across
the web. An antitrust tussle that’s coming to a head in Australia is set to
change that.
Australia’s competition
regulator will this month publish draft rules forcing the two U.S. tech giants to share
revenue generated from news with the original publishers, including Rupert
Murdoch’s News Corp. A final version of the code, the first of its kind in the
world, is due to follow soon after.
Between them, Facebook Inc.
and Alphabet Inc.’s Google have a dominant position in the online advertising
market and that has been under intensifying regulatory and political assault in the U.S. and Europe, with Australia now
adding another front of attack.
Investors are sitting up,
too. Should watchdogs in other markets follow Australia, it would chip away at
two of the most wildly successful business models of the 21st century, built
largely on content free-for-alls. Facebook and Alphabet have combined market
values in New York of about $1.7 trillion.
“This would be a major shot
across the bow from a regulatory perspective,” said Dan Ives, an analyst at
Wedbush Securities in New York. “It could open up a Pandora’s box around
monetization and sharing of data.”
‘This One Matters’
In an interview, Australian
Competition & Consumer Commission Chairman Rod Sims said he knows of
several counterparts overseas who are considering taking similar steps. With
traditional media hemorrhaging jobs and facing an assault from populist
politicians alleging fake news, the 69-year-old is swinging the pendulum back
in the publishers’ favor. To Sims, it’s about more than simply forcing
businesses on his beat to play fair.
“This one matters because
journalism matters,” he said. “The fourth estate is such a fundamental part of
what makes our societies work.”
Traditional media companies
have long complained their content is being exploited by digital platforms
without due compensation. But that’s only part of the picture.
While platforms and
publishers all compete for web clicks and eyeballs that can be turned into
advertising revenue, they’re also allies of sorts. News stories, or even just
links to them, are part of the appeal of Facebook and Google, helping them keep
visitors engaged and vacuum up more data. The tech giants, in turn, direct
traffic back to the publishers’ websites.
‘Fundamentally Incorrect’
The nature of this
relationship is central to the crackdown by Australia’s competition watchdog.
“There’s no doubt the net value flow is to the platforms,” said Sims. Facebook
has called such an assumption “fundamentally incorrect.”
In a 58-page submission to the ACCC last month,
Facebook described news as “highly substitutable” content. Even a complete
purge of stories in Australia, Facebook said, would make little difference.
“News does not drive significant long-term commercial value for our business,” it
said.
Australian news
organizations, meanwhile, garnered 2.3 billion clicks from Facebook’s news feed
between January and May 2020, Facebook said.
At Google, only a “very
small” direct and indirect economic value comes from news in Google Search,
Australia Managing Director Mel Silva said in a May blog post. Meanwhile, Google Search accounted for 3.44
billion visits to Australian news publishers for free in 2018, she wrote.
Amid the dispute, it’s not
clear what the code will cost the tech giants in Australia. That’s partly
because in between the baby pictures and community group posts on Facebook,
it’s almost impossible to quantify the subjective appeal of news. “I would say
#goodluckregulators,” Rich Greenfield, an analyst at New York-based research
firm LightShed Partners, said in an email. “I have no idea how they will
determine the value.”
Turning Tide
Even Sims warns it will be
“extremely hard,” but says “there are always ways to put numbers around
things.” And in recent months, publishers appear to have gained ground in the
argument.
In April, France’s antitrust
regulator ordered Google to pay media companies to display
snippets of articles. Then in June, Google said it would pay certain media outlets it will
feature in a yet-to-be-released news service in Germany, Australia and Brazil.
Terms weren’t disclosed.
Perhaps most significantly,
Facebook late last year introduced a separate news section, paying the
publishers whose stories were featured. Some 200 publishers were involved in
the Facebook News service, some of them receiving between $1 million and $3
million a year to put articles in the section.
The ACCC’s mandatory code
goes further: the watchdog’s concepts paper raised the possibility of
collective media boycotts of Facebook and Google in the absence of “appropriate
remuneration.”
In a statement, Google said
it has “worked closely and constructively with news media businesses, the ACCC
and the government as part of this process and will continue to do so.”
Facebook “will continue to
work closely with news organisations, the ACCC and the Australian government to
sustain a strong news ecosystem,” said Mia Garlick, the company’s director of
policy for Australia and New Zealand. But she said: “A regulatory approach that
lumps two tech companies together and benefits only the most powerful
publishers does not do that.”
Sims says he’s skeptical of
Facebook’s argument that news delivers little economic value, and expects his
code to start balancing the equation.
“I’m not contemplating
failure,” Sims said.
©2020 Bloomberg L.P.
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