Campaign India Team
Feb 25, 2021

INS wants Google to compensate Indian newspapers for use of content by sharing ad revenues

This follows Google agreeing to better compensate and pay publishers in France and Australia

Unsplash
Unsplash
The Indian Newspaper Society has written to Google to compensate newspapers in the country for the use of content published by them, and to share its advertising revenues.
 
L Adimoolam, president, INS, has addressed a letter to Sanjay Gupta, country manager, Google India, to address this concern. The letter states that the content which is generated and published by newspapers at considerable expense is proprietary, and it is this credible content that has given Google the authenticity in India.
 
The INS added that there is a huge distinction between the editorial content from quality publications and fake news that is spreading on other information platforms.
 
This follows Google agreeing to better compensate and pay publishers in countries like France and Australia.
 
This is based on the fact that advertising has been the financial backbone of the news industry. Newspapers are feeling the pressure, as its advertising pie is shrinking according to various media reports since budgets are shifting to digital. 
 
The INS insisted that Google should increase the publisher share of advertising revenue to 85 percent, and also ensure more transparency in the revenue reports provided to publishers by Google.
 
It has also stated that INS should give greater prominence to editorial content from registered news publishers to tackle fake news. The INS believes that Google picks up content from several sites that are not credible, thus 'amplifying misinformation and propagation of fake news'.
 
Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

41 minutes ago

Goafest 2024 and ABBY Awards to be held in Mumbai ...

The much-anticipated Goafest will now take place at the Westin Powai in Mumbai from May 29 to 31.

2 hours ago

Venke Sharma joins Sprinklr after departing from Disney

Sharma has joined Sprinklr as vice president and global head of product strategy after 11 years at Disney, reporting into chief technology officer Amitabh Mishra.

21 hours ago

Publicis to shake up board: Arthur Sadoun takes ...

Two boards become one as supervisory and management boards merge.

21 hours ago

24 hours with...Prateek Sethi

Catch up with Prateek Sethi, founder and director for Trip, as he takes us through a day in the life.