French sites demand Google pays for using their content

Sep 14, 2012 | Search engine marketing

France’s leading online newspaper publishers have called for a new laws to Google and other search engines to pay them for using their published content. In an interview, Nathalie Collin publisher of Le Nouvel Observateur weekly, said a law should impose a settlement in the long-running dispute with Google, which receives high volumes of advertising […]

France’s leading online newspaper publishers have called for a new laws to Google and other search engines to pay them for using their published content. In an interview, Nathalie Collin publisher of Le Nouvel Observateur weekly, said a law should impose a settlement in the long-running dispute with Google, which receives high volumes of advertising revenue from user searches for news contained on media websites.


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Talking to Le Figaro, she suggested that media would in exchange for a “fair payment” give up their objection that Google index their news content.
Google France told AFP that it believed such a law “would be harmful to the Internet, Internet users and news websites that benefit from a substantial traffic” sent to them by Google’s search engine.
The search engine giant, which has its European base in Ireland, reported about €41m in revenue in France.
The country’s earlier conservative-led government had cautioned internet giants that it may attack and adopt a new law to tax revenue generated form online advertisements.
In 2011, politicians in France discarded plans for a tax on online advertising revenues, believing the project would cause damages to small local firms when compared to global internet giants.

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