Google ends ‘first-click free’ policy to help publishers seeking paywall

03 Oct 2017

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Google announced new steps to help struggling news organisations Monday - including an end to a longstanding "first-click free" policy - to help generate fresh revenues for publishers hurt by the shift from print to digital.

The Alphabet Inc unit is scrapping the contentious search result rule for subscription news sites and giving them new tools to attract more paying customers.

According to Bloomberg, this is Google's most significant step yet to get in the good books of news organisations that provide information for its search engine but have lost ad revenue from the rise of the internet. Facebook Inc, the primary driver of online news traffic, is taking similar steps.

The moves come amid mounting criticism that online platforms are siphoning off the majority of revenues as more readers turn to digital platforms for news.

"I truly believe that Google and news publishers actually share a common cause," said Google vice president Philipp Schindler. "Our users truly value high quality journalism."

Google announced a series of measures, the most significant of which would be to replace the decade-old policy of requiring news organisations to provide one article discovered in a news search without subscribing - a standard known as "first click free."

This will be replaced by a "flexible sampling" model that will allow publishers to require a subscription at any time they choose.

"We realise that one size does not fit all," said Richard Gingras, Google's vice president for news.

This will allow news organisations to decide whether to show articles at no cost or to implement a "paywall" for some or all content.

While this is good news for established publishers, it may not be so good for parasitic online news sites that thrive by reproducing news from other publications.

Gingras said the new policy, effective immediately, will be in place worldwide, adding that it was not clear how many publishers would start implementing an immediate paywall as a result.

"The reaction to our efforts has been positive," he told a conference call announcing the new policy.

"This is not a silver bullet to the subscription market. It is a very competitive market for information. And people buy subscriptions when they have a perception of value."

Google said it is recommending a "metering" system allowing 10 free articles per month as the best way to encourage subscriptions.

News Corp chief executive Robert Thomson, whose company operates The Wall Street Journal and newspapers in Britain and Australia, welcomed Google's announcement.

"If the change is properly introduced, the impact will be profoundly positive for journalists everywhere and for the cause of informed societies," said a statement from Thomson, a fierce critic of the prior Google policy.

Thomson and others had complained that "first click free" penalised news organisations that declined to participate by demoting their articles in Google searches.

"The felicitous demise of First Click Free (Second Click Fatal) is an important first step in recognising the value of legitimate journalism and provenance on the internet," he said.

Just two years ago, Google and News Corp. clashed over the publisher's complaints to antitrust regulators in Europe. Google had a troubled public courtship with other publishers, too. "We are afraid of Google," Mathias Dopfner, chairman of German publishing giant Axel Springer SE, wrote in a 2014 open letter.

The California tech giant also said it would work with publishers to make subscriptions easier, including allowing readers to pay with their Google or Android account to avoid a cumbersome registration process.

"We think we can get it down to one click, that would be superb," Gingras said.

He explained people are becoming more accustomed to paying for news, but that a "sometimes painful process of signing up for a subscription can be a turn off. That's not great for users or for news publishers who see subscriptions as an increasingly important source of revenue."

Google would share data with the news organisations to enable them to keep up the customer relationship, he added.

"We're not looking to own the customer," he said. "We will provide the name of user, the email and if necessary the address."

Gingras said Google is also exploring ways "to use machine learning to help publishers recognise potential subscribers," employing the internet giant's technology to help news organisations.

He added that Google was not implementing the changes to generate revenues for itself, but that some financial details had not been worked out.

Google does not intend to take a slice of subscription revenues, he noted. "Our intent is to be as generous as possible," he said.

Facebook is widely believed to be working on a similar effort to help news organisations drive more subscriptions.

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