Google fined €500 million in France over news copyright

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France’s antitrust watchdog, French Compensation Authority (FCA) has slapped a €500 million fine on Google for failing to comply with the regulator’s orders on how to conduct talks with the country’s news publishers in a row over copyright.

The fine comes amid increasing international pressure on online platforms such as Google and Facebook to share more revenue with news outlets.

Google is now expected to come up with proposals within the next two months on how it would compensate news agencies and other publishers for the use of their news. If it does not do that, the company would face additional fines of up to €900,000 per day.

Google said it was very disappointed with the decision but would comply, Reuters reported.

“Our objective remains the same: We want to turn the page with a definitive agreement. We will take the French Competition Authority’s feedback into consideration and adapt our offers,” it said.

A Google spokesman added: “We have acted in good faith throughout the entire process. The fine ignores our efforts to reach an agreement, and the reality of how news works on our platforms.”

News publishers APIG, SEPM and AFP accused the global tech giant of having failed to hold talks in good faith with them to find common ground for the remuneration of news content online, under a recent European Union directive that creates what is known as “neighbouring rights”.

The case itself focused on whether Google breached temporary orders issued by FCA, which demanded such talks take place within three months with any news publishers that ask for them.

“When the authority decrees an obligation for a company, it must comply scrupulously, both in the spirit and letter (of the decision). Here, this was unfortunately not the case,” FCA Chief, Isabelle de Silva, said in a statement.

She also said the regulator considered that Google had not acted in good faith in its negotiations with the publishers.

APIG, which represents most major French print news publishers including Le Figaro and Le Monde, remains one of the plaintiffs, even though it signed a framework agreement with Google earlier this year, sources have said.

“This framework deal has been put on hold pending the antitrust decision,” the sources said.

The framework agreement, which many other French media outlets criticized, was one of the highest-profile deals under Google’s “News Showcase” programme to provide compensation for news snippets used in search results, and the first of its kind in Europe.

Google agreed to pay US$76 million over three years to a group of 121 French news publishers to end the copyright row.

It followed months of bargaining between Google, French publishers and news agencies over how to apply the revamped EU copyright rules, which allow publishers to demand a fee from online platforms showing extracts of their news.

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