Google Threatens To Withdraw Its Search Engine from This Continent

947

  • Australia is introducing a world-first law to make Google, Facebook and potentially other tech companies pay media outlets for their news content.
  • But the US firms have fought back, warning the law would make them withdraw some of their services.
  • Australia is far from Google’s largest market, but the proposed news code is seen as a possible global test case for how governments could seek to regulate big tech firms.

Google has threatened to remove its search engine from Australia over the nation’s attempt to make the tech giant share royalties with news publishers, reports BBC.

Impact of the proposed news code

In Australia, the proposed news code would tie Google and Facebook to mediated negotiations with publishers over the value of news content, if no agreement could be reached first.

Google Australia managing director Mel Silva told a Senate hearing on Friday that the laws were “unworkable”.

“If this version of the code were to become law, it would give us no real choice but to stop making Google Search available in Australia,” she said. But lawmakers challenged this, accusing Google of “blackmail” and bullying Australia for raising the reform.

Australians have expressed confusion and anger online at both sides. Some have debated whether they could get by using other search engines.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web, said Australia’s plan would make the web “unworkable around the world”.

Why is Australia pushing this law?

Google is the dominant search engine in Australia and has been described by the government as a near-essential utility, with little market competition.

The government has argued that because the tech platforms gain customers from people who want to read the news, the tech giants should pay newsrooms a “fair” amount for their journalism.

In addition, it has argued that the financial support is needed for Australia’s embattled news industry because a strong media is vital to democracy.

Media companies, including News Corp Australia, a unit of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, have lobbied hard for the government to force tech firms to the negotiating table amid a long-term decline in advertising revenue.

Meanwhile, Google’s revenues have increased markedly in the same period, amounting to more than $160bn (£117bn) globally in 2019. In the same year, Google was reported to have made $3.7bn in gross revenue in Australia.

Of that revenue, $7.7m was generated from news content, Google said in a blog last year.

This is a highly unusual threat

Google dominates the search engine market with a nearly 90% market share. Almost all its revenue is from ads. For Google to threaten to pull out of an entire country suggests the company is worried.

Australia is nowhere near its biggest market. But Google execs are fearful about the precedent these new laws could set.

Google has had a very profitable pandemic so far, while many local newspapers have struggled. That doesn’t look good – Australian politicians aren’t the first, and won’t be the last, to point that out.

Google says it wants to help fund original, local journalism.

But clearly it believes that what is being proposed in Australia could fundamentally hurt its business model if replicated elsewhere.

What does Google argue?

Ms Silva said the laws would set “an untenable precedent for our businesses and the digital economy” if Google had to pay for link and search results.

This was not compatible with the free-flowing share of information online or “how the internet works”, she argued.

Google has run ads in its browsers in Australia advocating its case

“We do not see a way, with the financial and operational risks, that we could continue to offer a service in Australia,” she said.

Last week, Google confirmed it was blocking Australian news sites from its search results for about 1% of local users. It said it was an experiment to test the value of Australian news services.

Facebook last year also threatened to stop Australian users from sharing news stories on the platform if the law went ahead.

The social media giant repeated that position on Friday, with executive Simon Milner telling the Senate hearing it was “a potential worse-case consequence”.

He said Facebook derived almost no commercial benefit from having news content on its platform.

Both firms have argued that news organisations already get the benefit of platforms driving readers to their websites. Google has also cited its Google News partnership as evidence it supports journalism.

Where the profits go currently

Australia’s news industry is struggling. Of every A$100 (£56; $77) spent on digital advertising, A$81 goes to Google and Facebook. And Covid-19 has only made this worse.

With companies reducing their digital advertising spend, a number of outlets in Australia have been forced to close.

Google, by contrast, has been performing well. Last year the social media giant made almost $4bn from Australia, while paying $45m in tax.

Meanwhile, Australia’s competition watchdog has accused both Facebook and Google of misleading Australian consumers about how their data is used, launching inquiries into digital advertising and the app stores market.

Did you subscribe to our daily Newsletter?

It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe

Source: BBC

1 COMMENT

  1. I hope that this will never happen. I run a small blog concerning Italian perfumes. This is quite a narrow niche on the market. My copywriters produce about 12-15 articles a month for our blog, then optimize the content via https://rush-analytics.com/land/content-optimizer. If google leaves the continent then all this was done to no avail.

Comments are closed.