BEIJING: For two decades, global news outlets have complained internet companies<\/a> are getting rich at their expense, selling advertising linked to their reports without sharing revenue. 谷歌威胁要使其搜索引擎无法在澳大利亚的立法,这将创建一个小组来进行定价决策的消息。乐动扑克周四,Facebook回应阻止用户访问和共享澳大利亚新闻。乐动扑克 北京:二十年来,全球新闻媒体抱怨乐动扑克互联网公司越来越丰富的费用,销售广告链接到他们的报告没有分享收入。
Now, Australia is joining France and other governments in pushing Google<\/a>, Facebook<\/a> and other internet<\/a> giants to pay. That might channel more money to a news industry that is cutting coverage as revenue shrinks. But it also sets up a clash with some of the tech industry's biggest names.
Google<\/a>, a unit of Alphabet Inc.<\/a>, has announced agreements to pay publishers in Australia while Facebook<\/a> said Thursday it has blocked users in the country from viewing or sharing news.
WHAT IS HAPPENING IN AUSTRALIA?<\/strong>
Facing a proposed law to compel internet companies<\/a> to pay news organizations, Google has announced deals with Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. and Seven West Media. No financial details were released. The Australian Broadcasting Corp. is in negotiations.
Google accounts for 53% percent of Australian online advertising revenue and Facebook 23%, according to Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.
Google had threatened to make its search engine unavailable in Australia in response to the legislation, which would create a panel to make pricing decisions on news.
On Thursday, Facebook responded by blocking users from accessing and sharing Australian news.
Facebook said the proposed law \"ignores the realities\" of its relationship with publishers that use its service to \"share news content.\" That was despite Frydenberg saying this week Google and Facebook \"do want to enter into these commercial arrangements.\"
WHAT IS HAPPENING IN OTHER COUNTRIES?
<\/strong>Australia's proposed law would be the first of its kind, but other governments also are pressuring Google, Facebook and other internet<\/a> companies to pay news outlets and other publishers for material.
In Europe, Google had to negotiate with French publishers after a court last year upheld an order saying such agreements were required by a 2019 European Union<\/a> copyright directive.
France is the first government to enforce the rules, but the decision suggests Google, Facebook and other companies will face similar requirements in other parts of the 27-nation trade bloc.
Google and a group of French publishers have announced a framework agreement for the American company to negotiate licensing deals with individual publishers. The company has deals with outlets including the newspaper Le Monde and the weekly magazine l'Obs.
Last year, Facebook announced it would pay U.S. news organizations including The Wall Street Journal<\/a>, The Washington Post<\/a> and USA Today for headlines. No financial details were released.
In Spain, Google shut down its news website after a 2014 law required it to pay publishers.
WHY DOES THIS MATTER?<\/strong>
Developments in Australia and Europe suggest the financial balance between multibillion-dollar internet companies and news organizations might be shifting.
Australia is responding to complaints internet companies should share advertising and other revenue connected to news reports, magazine articles and other content that appears on their websites or is shared by users.
The government acted after its competition regulator tried and failed to negotiate a voluntary payment plan with Google. The proposed law would create a panel to make binding decisions on the price of news reports to help give individual publishers more negotiating leverage with global internet companies.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR THE PUBLIC?<\/strong>
Google's agreement means a new revenue stream for news outfits, but whether that translates into more coverage for readers, viewers and listeners is unclear.
The union for Australian journalists is calling on media companies to make sure online revenue goes into news gathering.
\"Any monies from these deals need to end up in the newsroom, not the boardroom,\" said Marcus Strom, president of the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance. \"We will be pressing the case for transparency on how these funds are spent.\"
In the meantime, access occasionally could suffer: Facebook's move Thursday initially blocked some Australian commercial and government communications pages.
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之间的谷歌、脸谱网和澳大利亚?
现在,澳大利亚是加入法国和其他国家的政府在推动谷歌,脸谱网和其他互联网巨人。可能渠道更多的钱将报道的新闻产业收入减少。乐动扑克但它也建立了一个冲突的一些科技行业最大的名字。
谷歌,一个单位的字母(aapl . o:行情)。在澳大利亚,宣布协议支付出版商脸谱网周四说,它阻止了用户查看或分享新闻。乐动扑克
面对提出法律,强制要求互联网公司新闻机构来说,乐动扑克谷歌宣布处理鲁珀特•默多克(Rupert Murdoch)的新闻集团(news corp .)和7个西方媒体。没有公布的财务细节。澳大利亚广播公司谈判。
谷歌占澳大利亚在线广告收入的53%和Facebook 23%,根据财务主管Josh Frydenberg。
谷歌威胁要使其搜索引擎无法在澳大利亚的立法,这将创建一个小组来进行定价决策的消息。乐动扑克
周四,Facebook回应阻止用户访问和共享澳大利亚新闻。乐动扑克
Facebook说,拟议的法律”,忽略了现实”与出版商之间的关系,利用其服务“分享新闻内容。”乐动扑克That was despite Frydenberg saying this week Google and Facebook "do want to enter into these commercial arrangements."
在其他国家正在发生什么吗?
澳大利亚的法律提案将是第一个,但其他国家政府也迫使谷歌,Facebook和其他互联网公司新闻媒体和其他出版商支付材料。乐动扑克
在欧洲,谷歌与法国出版商谈判后法院去年支持订单表示,此类协议所需的2019欧盟版权指令。
法国是第一个政府执行规则,但这个决定表明谷歌、Facebook和其他公司将面临类似的要求在27国贸易集团的其他部分。
谷歌和一群法国出版商已宣布美国公司的框架协议谈判授权协议与个别出版商。公司已经与媒体包括报纸《世界报》周刊l 'Obs。乐动扑克
去年,Facebook宣布将美国新闻机构包括支付乐动扑克华尔街日报》,华盛顿邮报》和《今日美国》的头条。没有公布的财务细节。
在西班牙,谷歌关闭了其新闻网站在2014年法律规定支付出版商。乐动扑克
为什么这很重要?
在澳大利亚和欧洲的发展表明,金融资产数十亿美元的互联网公司和新闻机构之间可能会发生转变。乐动扑克
澳大利亚是应对投诉互联网公司应该共享连接到新闻报道,广告和其他收入杂志文章和其他内容,出现在他们的网站或由用户共享。乐动扑克
政府行动后竞争监管机构也曾试图协商自愿付款计划与谷歌。该法案将创建一个小组有约束力的决定新闻报道帮助个别出版商的价格与全球互联网公司更多的谈判筹码。乐动扑克
为公众这是什么意思?
谷歌的协议意味着一个新的收入来源的新闻机构,但是否可以转化为更多的读者,观众和听众还不清楚。乐动扑克
澳大利亚记者联盟呼吁媒体公司,确保在线收入进入新闻采集。乐动扑克
“任何钱从这些交易需要在新闻编辑室,没有会议室,”马库斯Strom说,总统的媒体、娱乐、艺术联盟。乐动扑克“我们将按透明度的情况下这些资金是如何使用的。”
同时,访问偶尔可能会:Facebook此举最初周四封锁一些澳大利亚的商业和政府通讯页面。
BEIJING: For two decades, global news outlets have complained internet companies<\/a> are getting rich at their expense, selling advertising linked to their reports without sharing revenue.
Now, Australia is joining France and other governments in pushing Google<\/a>, Facebook<\/a> and other internet<\/a> giants to pay. That might channel more money to a news industry that is cutting coverage as revenue shrinks. But it also sets up a clash with some of the tech industry's biggest names.
Google<\/a>, a unit of Alphabet Inc.<\/a>, has announced agreements to pay publishers in Australia while Facebook<\/a> said Thursday it has blocked users in the country from viewing or sharing news.
WHAT IS HAPPENING IN AUSTRALIA?<\/strong>
Facing a proposed law to compel internet companies<\/a> to pay news organizations, Google has announced deals with Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. and Seven West Media. No financial details were released. The Australian Broadcasting Corp. is in negotiations.
Google accounts for 53% percent of Australian online advertising revenue and Facebook 23%, according to Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.
Google had threatened to make its search engine unavailable in Australia in response to the legislation, which would create a panel to make pricing decisions on news.
On Thursday, Facebook responded by blocking users from accessing and sharing Australian news.
Facebook said the proposed law \"ignores the realities\" of its relationship with publishers that use its service to \"share news content.\" That was despite Frydenberg saying this week Google and Facebook \"do want to enter into these commercial arrangements.\"
WHAT IS HAPPENING IN OTHER COUNTRIES?
<\/strong>Australia's proposed law would be the first of its kind, but other governments also are pressuring Google, Facebook and other internet<\/a> companies to pay news outlets and other publishers for material.
In Europe, Google had to negotiate with French publishers after a court last year upheld an order saying such agreements were required by a 2019 European Union<\/a> copyright directive.
France is the first government to enforce the rules, but the decision suggests Google, Facebook and other companies will face similar requirements in other parts of the 27-nation trade bloc.
Google and a group of French publishers have announced a framework agreement for the American company to negotiate licensing deals with individual publishers. The company has deals with outlets including the newspaper Le Monde and the weekly magazine l'Obs.
Last year, Facebook announced it would pay U.S. news organizations including The Wall Street Journal<\/a>, The Washington Post<\/a> and USA Today for headlines. No financial details were released.
In Spain, Google shut down its news website after a 2014 law required it to pay publishers.
WHY DOES THIS MATTER?<\/strong>
Developments in Australia and Europe suggest the financial balance between multibillion-dollar internet companies and news organizations might be shifting.
Australia is responding to complaints internet companies should share advertising and other revenue connected to news reports, magazine articles and other content that appears on their websites or is shared by users.
The government acted after its competition regulator tried and failed to negotiate a voluntary payment plan with Google. The proposed law would create a panel to make binding decisions on the price of news reports to help give individual publishers more negotiating leverage with global internet companies.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR THE PUBLIC?<\/strong>
Google's agreement means a new revenue stream for news outfits, but whether that translates into more coverage for readers, viewers and listeners is unclear.
The union for Australian journalists is calling on media companies to make sure online revenue goes into news gathering.
\"Any monies from these deals need to end up in the newsroom, not the boardroom,\" said Marcus Strom, president of the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance. \"We will be pressing the case for transparency on how these funds are spent.\"
In the meantime, access occasionally could suffer: Facebook's move Thursday initially blocked some Australian commercial and government communications pages.
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