Showing posts with label News Media Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News Media Alliance. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Media sector seeks new powers to challenge Big Tech
WASHINGTON -- Big Tech firms are clobbering traditional news organizations, media representatives told lawmakers Tuesday, asking for new authority to allow the struggling sector to team up against online platforms.
The comments came as the House Judiciary Committee opened the first in what is expected to be a series of hearings examining the dominance of Big Tech in several economic sectors.
Tuesday's hearing sought to focus on the plight of news organizations, which have struggled to keep up with the dominance of Facebook and Google in online advertising.
"In effect, a couple of dominant tech platforms are acting as regulators of the digital news industry," said David Chavern of the News Media Alliance, previously known as the Newspaper Association of America.
"The result of the tech platforms' regulation of the news industry has been to siphon revenue away from news organizations."
But Chavern said that rather than push for a breakup, Congress should pass a law giving the media sector its own antitrust exemption to better compete with Big Tech.
He cited the proposed Journalism Competition and Preservation Act as "an innovative, market-oriented solution" to the problem.
"Markets work best when different parties can negotiate with one another on reasonably even footing -- and where both parties have some leverage to credibly withdraw from negotiations if the other side demands unreasonable or exploitative terms," he said.
The bill "helps remedy this imbalance by allowing news organizations to bargain collectively against dominant tech platforms."
David Pitofsky, general counsel at News Corp, which publishes the Wall Street Journal, offered similar remarks.
"If publishers could band together they might be able to use their collective leverage to bring the platforms to the negotiating table. But doing so is made impossible by the antitrust laws," Pitofsky said.
Pitofsky said he was hopeful for "reinvigorated antitrust enforcement" but noted that this would "require years of investigation and litigation."
"In the interim, news publishers need a fighting chance. The Journalism Competition and Preservation Act is well-designed to help restore the proper balance between content generators and content distributors."
Gene Kimmelman of the consumer group Public Knowledge said the news sector's woes were deep but should be resolved through market forces.
"We do not believe this problem will be solved by allowing more consolidation of power, whether among platforms or media," Kimmelman said.
"And we believe exceptions to the antitrust laws should be a tool of last resort, if they are ever used. Enabling excess market power to challenge the existing dominant platforms does nothing to address the long term need to develop market forces that promote strong local journalism."
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
US newspapers assail Google-Facebook online 'duopoly'
WASHINGTON - The US newspaper industry on Monday warned of a "duopoly" in online news by Google and Facebook, and called for legislation that would relax antitrust rules allowing collective negotiations with the internet giants.
The News Media Alliance said that because Google and Facebook dominate online news traffic digital advertising, "publishers are forced to surrender their content and play by their rules on how news and information is displayed, prioritized and monetized."
A statement by the association of some 2,000 media groups said news organizations "are limited with disaggregated negotiating power against a de facto duopoly that is vacuuming up all but an ever-decreasing segment of advertising revenue."
The group, formerly known as the Newspaper Association of America, includes large dailies like the New York Times and Wall Street Journal as well as hundreds of smaller media groups and regional news organizations.
The request comes amid a prolonged slump in traditional print news, as readers increasingly turn to online platforms.
News Media Alliance president David Chavern, writing in a Wall Street Journal commentary, said that the internet platforms "distort the flow of economic value derived from good reporting."
He said Google and Facebook account for more than 70 percent of the $73 billion spent each year on digital advertising, and they eat up most of the growth, with nearly 80 percent of all online referral traffic coming from the two firms.
"But the two digital giants don't employ reporters. They don’t dig through public records to uncover corruption, send correspondents into war zones, or attend last night’s game to get the highlights," Chavern said.
"They expect an economically squeezed news industry to do that costly work for them."
Facebook and Google, which share some revenue with news organizations on certain platforms, have been stepping up efforts to help media groups with grants and other programs.
Facebook's head of news partnerships, Campbell Brown, said in a statement to AFP: "We're committed to helping quality journalism thrive on Facebook. We're making progress through our work with news publishers and have more work to do."
Google said in a statement: "We want to help news publishers succeed as they transition to digital. In recent years we've built numerous specialized products and technologies, developed specifically to help distribute, fund, and support newspapers."
source: news.abs-cbn.com
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