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Google Reveals Payment Deal with AP
Posted by
Zonk
on Sat Aug 05, 2006 06:36 AM
from the good-old-ap dept.
from the good-old-ap dept.
mytrip writes to mention a ZDNet article concerning a deal Google has struck with the Associated Press. The search company has ended a dispute between the two organizations by agreeing to pay for the articles and content it delivers via its Google News service. From the article: "Financial terms were not disclosed. Consequently, it's unclear whether the deal involves a flat fee or paying AP according to traffic statistics. On the surface, paying the Associated Press seems to conflict with the stance Google has traditionally taken regarding its Google News service. Because Google News is an aggregator, the company has argued, Google is not obliged to reimburse news outlets for linking to their content. But Wednesday's announcement said the AP content will be the foundation for a new product that will merely complement Google News. Thus Google maintains that the deal supports its original stance on fair use."
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Monopoly play (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:4, Funny)
I wonder how this will play out? My theory:
1) AP forces Google to sign a contract based on traffic
2) Google puts AP articles last.
3) AP traffic drops to 3%.
4) AP crawls back to google and apologises.
5) ???
6) Profit.
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:3, Insightful)
Because then you will only access their sites when there is an article that interests you, and you will go directly t
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
In way of explanation, here's mine...
X >> Y
Where:
X = # People viewing story deeplinked via news aggregator
Y = # People who randomly found said website, and navigated to page manually.
I
Re:Monopoly play (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Yeah, I much prefer how news is handled in a communist system. They don't put a fence around it, they just shoot the messenger, or put him in prison for t
Re:Monopoly play (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:3, Interesting)
"The inherent vice of capit
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Hypercapitalism? What fucking color is the sky in *your* world? The current system of economic mismanagement, in case you haven't noticed, is firmly rooted in corporate oligarchy backed, supported, and enforced by bought-and-paid-for gover
Re:Monopoly play (Score:1, Insightful)
What you're describing is not a direct consequence of an economic system, try...
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
For the record, Communism is an economic system, as is Capitalism. The comment was about how Capitali
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
People who have a fetish or an axe to grind about something like to wander off topic and try to turn eve
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
I know just what you mean. That is why I had to say something to him. Thanks for backing me up, though. Appreciate it.
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
As regards distribution of the
Re:Monopoly play (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:2)
Re:Monopoly play (Score:1)
I agree with your wiewpoint, completely, but there is an alternative to 'paying' for the AP, and that is: to '
AP are scared (Score:1, Interesting)
Sounds like AP are scared of Google competing with them. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.
---
Re:AP are scared (Score:3, Informative)
Re:AP are scared (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:AP are scared (Score:2)
Content, not aggregation? (Score:5, Insightful)
We may soon find out just how much those sites were "hurt" by being linked from Google News, once they lose that sweet AP article traffic...
Re:Content, not aggregation? (Score:2, Interesting)
Many people will say that this drifts away from Google's main mission [google.com] because it doesn't "send people off" to other websites, which is the core of web searching.
Not adless (Score:2)
It'll be interesting to see how news sites react. The value of AP content to them
Re:Content, not aggregation? (Score:2)
Small clarification (Score:5, Informative)
Nice (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Small clarification (Score:2)
Logically they have to say that it's for "something else".
If they (admit that they) are just paying to link, then they've set a precedent that would mean that they would have to pay AFP, Reuters, and every other new organization.
Re:Small clarification (Score:2)
Re:Small clarification (Score:2)
AFP not AP? (Score:1)
Re:AFP not AP? (Score:1)
*shifty eyes* What I REALLY meant was...
Isn't it funny that Google's paying one news agency for full news articles, whilst several other newspapers have tried to sue google for lin
Re:AFP not AP? (Score:3, Insightful)
I've never understood the "deep linking" controversy or -- more to the point -- how linkees had any cause to object. But I guess at least here the issue
Direct vs. Indirect Access to articles (Score:3, Insightful)
wonder how AFP is doing? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you think about it, google could wipe out just tons of online news sites if they wanted to. Podunk and east buggywhip little news paper sites can afford to pull wire feeds. Google could do the same and just *drop* any places that are just redundant coverage of the same story once they have paid for it. They get copy and images from the feeds, so no real reason to index all those other places. Pull up any google news article, take a gander at the "all xxx-number related" links. Looks like around 99% identical to me. For that matter, they could hire freelancers by the droves around the planet and give a lot of the old established press services a thorough scare. Be a reporter, actually get looked at on the net with some numbers, stick with the old school news services, be limited to dead trees print if lucky. I bet a lot of the current freelancers that the wire news feeds use would jump ship quickly given that choice.
mod parent interesting-I would if I had points. (Score:2)
Remove duplicates? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Remove duplicates? (Score:2)
Re:Remove duplicates? (Score:2)
AdSense (Score:1)
I need such deal too (Score:1)
If AP Wants Money (Score:2)
Re:If AP Wants Money (Score:2)
The AP is one of the few worldwide organizations that is actually in the business of news gathering. Google News is ba
Re:If AP Wants Money (Score:2)
I've asked this a couple of times now. Could someone please point out specifically which section of the copyright act Google is not in compliance with by linking to other peoples' articles?
And
Why Can't these Faux "Victims" (Score:1)
just exclude ***themselves*** from being spidered / searched / archived / cached? Why, robots.txt exists for these uses. See http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/topic
<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOARCHIVE">
<META NAME="GOOGL