How Google Abuses Its Position as a Market Dominant Platform to
Strong- Arm News Publishers and Hurt Journalism
Updated: September 2022
Executive Summary
This White Paper is published by the News Media Alliance based on over a year’s worth of
interviews and consultations with many members of the organization. The news publishers
speak with a collective voice in demanding that Google stop abusing its market dominant
position in its interactions with them, compensate them fairly for the value of their content to
Google, and give them meaningful control over the specific uses of their own news articles by
Google.
As set forth in this White Paper, many of Google’s current uses of news content likely exceed the
boundaries of fair use under the Copyright Act. Given that reality, Google should have to
negotiate an appropriate use-specific license with news publishers for each use of their content.
In a competitive market, news publishers would be able to resist Google’s demands by
withholding their content unless and until acceptable terms were negotiated. But as set forth
below, Google has so much power as the dominant online platform, with the ability to play one
publisher off the other, that it has been able to effectively secure acquiescence from the news
publishers for its activities, which often are harmful to publishers. At base, there has been a
market failure in the news publishers’ ability to exercise the rights granted to them under the
Copyright Act.
Google has exercised its control over news publishers to force them into several relationships
that benefit Google at the publishers’ expense. These relationships include the following:
First, Google effectively gave the news publishers no choice but to implement Google’s
Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) standard or else lose critical placement in mobile search and
the resulting search traffic. Publishers were not only forced to build mirror-image websites using
this format, but Google caches all articles in the AMP format and directly serves this content to
mobile users. This subverts the core principle that grounded the early copyright decisions
protecting Google – namely, that a search engine is a fair use primarily because it acts as an
electronic pointer to the original website. AMP keeps users in Google’s ecosystem while
creating several disadvantages for news publishers – including making it more difficult in some
cases to form direct relationships with their readers, reducing their subscription conversion rates,
limiting the use of interactive features in AMP articles, reducing publisher ad revenues, and
impairing their collection of certain user data. Further, Google imposed onerous terms of use on
news publishers using the AMP URL API – which appear to give Google broad rights to use
AMP formatted articles in any Google products.
2
Second, Google used its market dominant position to force news publishers into the use of their
content in the newly designed Google News app – Google’s mobile news aggregator, which
makes heavy use of AMP content. The Google News app is designed in a fashion to satisfy
many casual readers, rather than leading them to click through to the articles. Further, to
participate meaningfully in Google News, news publishers must accept the onerous Google
News Producer Terms of Service, which grant Google the right to use the news content not only
in Google News and the Google News app, but for all “Google Services” – defined as any
products, service or technology developed by Google from time to time.
Third, Google is using news publishers’ AMP content to power its “Google Discover” service,
another news aggregator that is more akin to social media. Google never negotiated any specific
use license with the news publishers for this content.
Finally, Google Search is increasingly becoming a “walled garden” -- a final destination rather
than an electronic pointer to news websites. Google has again used its market dominant position
to force acquiescence to new features that diminish the chances that users will visit the news
websites.
This White Paper makes several recommendations at its close. First, antitrust enforcers should
address Google’s abuse of its market power. Second, the News Media Alliance advocates the
passage of the bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, which would allow news
publishers to join forces and negotiate collectively with Google. Third, Congress should explore
various means toward ensuring that publishers are compensated for their content. Journalism is
essential to a functioning democracy and requires substantial investment. Google is advancing
its own dominance while inflicting harm on the news industry. The detailed investigation set
forth in this White Paper makes plain that action is necessary to correct this abuse.
I. Introduction: Google the Frenemy to News Publishers
In 2007, the Ninth Circuit ruled in the Perfect 10 case that Google’s display of grainy thumbnail
photographs in its search engine results constituted fair use under the Copyright Act.
1
The
decision was the leading case that defined a generation of copyright law regarding search engines
and aggregators. It was also pivotal for Google, giving it the imprimatur of the courts. Some
thirteen years later, Google’s use of news content in Google Search, the Google News app and
Google Discover has vastly expanded, bearing little resemblance to those early days. Google has
become a publisher in its own right, heavily relying on and using premier newspaper content,
including news photographs, to draw traffic and thereby gather highly valuable data to fuel its
advertising business.
Google’s use of news publishers’ content does send substantial traffic to news publishers, but
Google is not fairly or appropriately compensating news publishers for the value of their
material, or properly treating the news industry as an important strategic partner. Instead, as set
forth in this White Paper, Google has misused its position as the dominant online platform to
1
Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 508 F.3d 1146 (9
th
Cir. 2007).
3
reap the benefits of the news media’s substantial investments in reporting without paying a
license fee. Further, it has misused its monopoly power to remove the ability for news publishers
to have adequate control of the use of their content – often using its market power to force
publishers into granting Google the apparent right to make vast and unknown uses of their
intellectual property far into the future, or other problematic conditions, if they wish to be
included on basic Google services. While Google, through the Google News Initiative, has
donated grant funding to the news media industry and provided some useful advice, none of this
is sufficient given the benefit to Google from news content and Google’s substitutive nature. In
short, the legal system gave Google protection on the theory that it was engaged in good faith,
fair uses of third-party content. Now, the facts underlying that original assumption have changed
dramatically and upset the balance between Google and publishers, leading to industry and
societal ramifications. In the process, the system has allowed Google to establish and entrench
its market power at the expense of publishers and other content creators.
Copyright law should protect the news publishers, since the argument is strong that
Google is exceeding the boundaries of fair use and thus should be required to pay a license fee
for its current usage of news content. But as set forth below, Google has so much power as the
dominant online platform, with the ability to play one news publisher off the other, that it has
been able to effectively secure acquiescence from the publishers for its activities without paying
a license fee for their content, despite their significant costs in reporting the news. At base,
there has been a market failure in the news publishers’ ability to exercise the rights granted to
them under the Copyright Act. Accordingly, copyright and competition policy need to align with
these stark market realities. This White Paper details Google’s broad usage of news publishers’
content through exercise of its dominance, rather than fair negotiations or a fair license fee.
Ultimately, Google has used cases like Perfect 10 and other decisions from the “early
days” of the internet to clear cut the legal protections of content creators and propel itself to a
position of unprecedented profitability and durable dominance at the expense of news publishers
and other content creators.
A. A Fair Use No Longer: The Factual Assumptions of the Perfect 10
Case No Longer Hold
The factual assumptions that led the Ninth Circuit to conclude that Google’s use of
thumbnail photographs in its search engine constituted a fair use no longer hold. The fair use
inquiry, set forth in 17 U.S.C. §107, is a fact-specific analysis based on several non-exclusive
factors. The first factor is “the purpose and character of the use” – including whether the use is
of a commercial nature as opposed to a nonprofit educational use, and whether the use is
“transformative.” In order to determine if a new use is “transformative,” a court considers
“whether the new work merely supersedes the objects of the original creation, or instead adds
something new, with a further purpose or different character, altering the first with new
expression, meaning or message.”
2
The second factor is the nature of the copyrighted work,
including whether it is unpublished. The third factor is the “amount and substantiality of the
2
Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, 510 U.S. 569, 579 (1994).
4
portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole.” The fourth factor is “the effect of
the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.”
What considerations led the Perfect 10 court to hold in 2007 that Google’s use of thumbnail
photographs in its search engine was fair? First, Google’s search engine was not seen as an
ultimate destination or publisher, but as merely as a tool or “pointer” providing direct access to
the original website containing the original copyrighted material – and hence a “transformative”
use. This was in keeping with Larry Page’s vision at the time; as he told an interviewer in 2004,
“We want to get you out of Google and to the right place as fast as possible.”
3
Second, the court
did not see Google as heavily commercial. AdWords was still relatively nascent, and courts had
yet to fully appreciate the significance of search advertising. Further, the low-quality, grainy
thumbnail images in Google search results at that time were not viewed as a substitute for the
original image and had no independent aesthetic appeal. Critically, the court also did not
perceive a search engine as creating any market harm for the original publisher. Finally, the
court viewed Google’s indexing of the plaintiff’s images as “incidental” and found that Google
was acting in keeping with principles of good faith and fair dealing. At the core of its reasoning,
the court concluded that the goal of the Copyright Act was to incentivize the progress of science
and the arts, and that the public benefits of the search engine outweighed any minimal impact of
the use on the original website’s incentive to create.
None of these assumptions apply today. In our view, Google would have a difficult time relying
on fair use to justify all its uses of newspaper content in Google Search, Google Discover, and
the Google News app. No longer are these confined to the minimal search results featured in the
famous blue links or the tiny, grainy photos from Google’s early days. The current, highly
appealing displays of news content create a deeply troubling substitution effect. A leading study
commissioned by the European Union found that an astonishing 47% of EU consumers “browse
and read news extracts on [search engines, news aggregators and social media] without clicking
on links to access the whole article in the newspaper page.
4
And while the Perfect 10 court did not view Google as a commercial business, today Google and
its parent Alphabet – which had 2019 revenues in excess of $161 billion -- are recognized as one
of the most successful commercial enterprises in the world. In 2019, Google reported roughly
$98 billion in annual revenue from search and other advertising.
5
This is roughly four times the
total annual revenue for circulation and advertising of all U.S. news publishers combined. As is
no secret, the news publishers are suffering economically, cutting staff and closing their doors –
thus reducing their ability to play the critical role served by the press. A recent report found that
3
David Sheff, Playboy Interview: Google guys: a candid conversation with America’s newest billionaires about
their oddball company, how they tamed the web and why their motto is “Don’t be evil”, P
LAYBOY, Sept. 1, 2004 at
p. 55.
4
Flash Eurobarometer 437 Report: Internet user’s preferences for accessing content online, EU OPEN DATA PORTAL
(SEPT. 2016), at p. 5, available for download at
https://ec.europa.eu/commfrontoffice/publicopinion/index.cfm/Survey/getSurveyDetail/instruments/FLASH/survey
Ky/2123.
5
Alphabet Announces Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2019 Results (Feb. 3, 2020), available at
https://abc.xyz/investor/static/pdf/2019Q4_alphabet_earnings_release.pdf?cache=79552b8
.
5
approximately 20 percent of all local newspapers in the United States have closed or merged
since 2004, and approximately 1,300 communities have lost all local news coverage.
6
In 2019
alone, the media industry laid off more than 7,800 people.
7
Finally, given both Google’s
conduct and the changed factual realities, it is likely that a court would view Google more as a
free-rider and be far more reluctant to conclude that it was acting in accordance with principles
of good faith and fair dealing.
B. Google Has Misused Its Position as A Market Dominant Platform
to Strong-Arm News Publishers into Inequitable Arrangements
A court taking a hard, fresh look at Google would likely find that many of its current uses of
newspaper content exceed what fair use permits – and thus, that Google has no legal right to use
this content absent a license. Given that reality, Google should be entering into fair negotiations,
and mutually acceptable written agreements, with the news publishers for each specific
contemplated use of their content, negotiations that would allow the news industry to attempt to
negotiate compensation and control if the playing field were remotely equal. But today’s world
is also very different from 2007 in the numerous ways that Google has used its position as the
dominant online platform to strong-arm the news industry into implicitly or explicitly giving into
broad and often unknown or unanticipated uses of its content. Google has used its leverage in
ranking search results to steer the news industry into a web of products that do not compensate
publishers for their participation or give them control over their valuable content. For example,
no news publisher can afford to remove itself from Google News for fear of falling in its Google
Search rankings – in part because of their interoperability – and Google has used this power to
advance its ends at the news media’s expense. As one publisher explained the relationship
generally, Google “sucks you into the vortex one step at a time without any visibility into its
eventual plans, leading to a clear dependency on Google, and only at the last minute do you
realize you’ve given away the farm.” Copyright law has become an ineffective protection
because the news publishers do not have the power to enforce their copyright rights.
This White Paper focuses on four examples to illustrate Google’s behavior toward the news
industry and the attendant competition concerns. The first relates broadly to Google’s herding of
the news publishers into using “Accelerated Mobile Pages” (known as AMP) – a stripped-down
format developed by Google to shorten the load time for web pages on mobile devices, first
announced in the fall of 2015. The second and third examples relate to the significantly
revamped Google News app and the Google Discover feed, both launched in 2018 – which make
heavy use of AMP content. In none of these situations did Google sit down with major
publishers to engage in a genuine negotiation of terms involving a give-and-take, rather than a
“take it or leave it” approach. Finally, this White Paper examines the changes in Google Search,
which raise increasing concerns that Google Search acts as a substitute for the original news
articles. In short, through the exercise of its monopoly-like power and the threat of lower search
6
Tom Stites, About 1,300 U.S. communities have totally lost news coverage, UNC news desert study finds, POYNTER
(Oct. 15, 2018), available at https://www.poynter.org/business-work/2018/about-1300-u-s-communities-have-
totally-lost-news-coverage-unc-news-desert-study-finds/.
7
Benjamin Goggin, 7,800 people lost their media jobs in a 2019 landslide, BUSINESS INSIDER (Dec. 10, 2019 5:05
p.m.), available at
https://www.businessinsider.com/2019-media-layoffs-job-cuts-at-buzzfeed-huffpost-vice-details-
2019-2#spin-media-group-29-jobs-september-and-january-18.
6
rankings, Google dictated non-negotiable terms of service or otherwise corralled the news
industry into less-than-fair terms for use of its content well beyond the boundaries of fair use.
Google’s approach toward the news industry for Google Search and Google News differs from
Facebook, which has recently entered into agreements with certain news publishers to
compensate them for the use of their articles in Facebook’s news tab. Apple News also provides
some compensation to a small number of news publishers for Apple News Plus. While
publishers have criticized aspects of these arrangements, it is noteworthy that these platforms
have not adopted Google’s extreme stance of refusing to provide compensation to news
publishers for use of their content in Google Search, Google News and Google Discover.
Most broadly, the four examples in this White Paper demonstrate that as Google has built its
monopoly-like market power in search, aggregation, and advertising, it has used that market
dominance to extract greater concessions of various sorts from publishers, in turn reinforcing
Google’s dominance of the web. This pattern demands review by federal and state antitrust
agencies.
II. The AMP Format: A Land Grab in the Name of Speed
Google developed and launched Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) in 2015, as a format
sometimes described as a “website on a diet. AMP makes use of a stripped-down version of
HTML that prioritizes loading speed simultaneously with dozens of proprietary
extensions. Google characterizes AMP as an open format, but it is anything but. Google did not
develop AMP in a manner consistent with the obligations and practices of a standards body, and
it follows almost none of the Open Stand principles defined by the organizations in charge of
Internet governance.
AMP stands in stark contrast to a truly open standard such as the HTML (HyperText Markup
Language) standard that defines the fundamental language used in Web pages. Over the years,
the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), and the
Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG) were delegated as the
independent standards bodies to oversee the technical specifications of the HTML format. All
versions of HTML were contributed to, and ultimately adopted by, countless private corporations
and now serve as a basis for all Web pages. On the other hand, AMP has been developed and
used predominantly by Google, and imposed on the market as a condition to obtain traffic from
Google Search on mobile devices.
Although some news publishers were initially attracted to the AMP format because it promised a
better user experience, including increased speed, the truth is that Google effectively gave news
publishers little choice but to adopt it – requiring them to create, in addition to their customary
websites, a second, near-mirror image website with AMP-formatted versions of their articles
(AMP URLs) that are hosted, stored and served from Google’s servers rather than their own.
8
While Google asserted that AMP was not a ranking factor for Google Search, it simultaneously
8
AMP pages on mobile search are served from the Google AMP cache. However, Google has long indicated that
“AMP pages on desktop . . . aren’t served from the Google AMP Cache/AMP Viewer.” Google Developers,
Understand How AMP Looks in Search Results, available at
https://developers.google.com/search/docs/guides/about-amp
(last visited on June 2, 2020).
7
stated that “speed is a ranking factor for Google Search” -- and the whole point of the AMP
format is that it loads faster.
9
Further, shortly after making this statement, Google introduced the
news carousel and indicated that “When an AMP page is available, it can be featured on mobile
search as part of rich results and carousels” placement that is critical to getting traffic.
10
Thus,
Google inextricably linked its AMP standard to placement for publishers on Google’s dominant
search engine result page. In addition, many Google products (such as the Google News app,
Google News on the web and Google Discover) give preferential treatment to AMP pages or
only accept the AMP format.
In the face of Google’s pressure, the major news publishers began developing and offering a
second website with AMP-formatted articles starting in 2016, putting most although not
necessarily all of their articles on these AMP URLs. One major newspaper that utilizes a
paywall decided not to incur the substantial cost of building an AMP website with a paywall and
tried to survive for several months without participating in AMP; although its subscriptions rose,
the traffic from Google and other platforms declined too precipitously for this to be a viable
road.
A. News Publisher Concerns About the AMP Format
While Google effectively made it impossible for news publishers to avoid creating AMP
versions of their web pages with a differently-formatted URL structure, it also extracted
significant – and in many cases undue – concessions from publishers. First, the way AMP works
is that once a news publisher posts its articles in the AMP format, Google caches these articles so
that they can load instantly for any mobile user who accesses the articles within the Google
ecosystem. By participating in AMP and using Google’s AMP URL API, publishers agree, via
non-negotiable terms and conditions, to let Google copy, store, host, and directly serve their
content to users. This inures to Google’s significant benefit in a variety of ways, including by
permitting Google, rather than the publishers, to “own” the relationship with their readers, and
by putting Google, rather than publishers, in charge of related data collection.
11
It also gives
Google an ongoing, almost full-scale copy of all publisher content to potentially use in ways that
were never contemplated. Although AMP enhances load speed for consumers, it represents a
9
Id.
10
Id.
11
Google Developers, FAQ, available at https://developers.google.com/amp/cache/faq (last visited June 3, 2020).
As the Google FAQ states:
What gets cached?
If an AMP page is valid and is requested (so the Google AMP Cache is aware of it), it will get cached. Any
resources in AMP pages, including AMP images, also get cached.
Can I stop content from being cached?
No. By using AMP, content producers are making the content in AMP files available to be cached by third
parties. For example, Google products use the Google AMP Cache to serve AMP content as fast as
possible.
8
seismic shift from the fundamental assumptions that initially led the courts to view Google’s
search engine as fair use.
In short, while the core premise of the Perfect 10 case was that the user would click on a
link in Google Search and travel to the original website, mobile users who click on AMP-
formatted articles in Google products remain in the Google ecosystem, where they are
shown the cached article instead of being directed to the news publisher websites.
As numerous prominent developers stated in an open letter to Google, “AMP keeps users within
Google’s domain and diverts traffic away from other websites for the benefit of Google. At a
scale of billions of users, this has the effect of further reinforcing Google’s dominance of the
Web.”
12
Google has purposely chosen to create a premium position at the top of their search
results only to “publishers that use a Google-controlled technology, served by Google from their
infrastructure, on a Google URL, and placed within a Google controlled user experience.”
13
Second, as detailed below, Google unilaterally dictated the terms of service for AMP – rather
than permitting the news industry to negotiate with them. Per Google, publishers using the AMP
URL API are governed by Google’s standard API terms of service, and these raise significant
concerns regarding Google’s ability to use the newspaper’s content now and into the future in
broad, unknown ways. In short, Google gave the news publishers little choice but to adapt the
AMP format and then required them to agree to broad, unknown future uses of their content.
The news publishers were corralled into building AMP URLs without knowing what they were
agreeing to in connection with future uses of their content – a problem that has now apparently
manifested itself with Google’s more recent products, as outlined below.
The AMP format admittedly has its benefits – although many if not all of these benefits could
have been achieved through means that did not so significantly increase Google’s power over
publishers or so favor its ability to collect data to foster its market domination. As mobile use
continues to grow rapidly, news websites need to load quickly to maintain the attention of
consumers with wide content choices. The AMP format increased load speed, which facilitates
traffic (although there were other potential routes to increased load speed). But many in the
news industry still have substantial concerns about the AMP format and its Google-dictated
ramifications:
At the most fundamental level, Google has placed itself in the middle of the
relationship between the newspaper and its user. The user is no longer visiting
the publisher’s website directly, but instead viewing a copy of the article hosted
on Google’s servers. Further, Google controls the AMP elements of the format,
its functions and capabilities, and encourages users to stay within the search
results page, for example, by creating an H-scroll in the Top News carousels that
seamlessly moves from one publisher to the next without ever leaving Google.
As subscriptions become increasingly important in an era in which digital ad
revenues pale in comparison to earlier revenues from print ads, having a separate
12
A letter about Google AMP, (Jan. 9, 2018), available at http://ampletter.org/.
13
Id.
9
proprietary format that does not easily foster direct relationships is even more
problematic.
Some newspapers with paywalls have expressed concerns that Google’s use of
articles in the AMP format has significantly hurt their ability to convert
consumers into subscribers – a key and increasingly important source of revenue.
One major newspaper, for example, did a study comparing subscriber conversion
rates for mobile traffic to its regular website as compared to traffic to its AMP
URL. The number of subscribers per million users was 39% lower for AMP
traffic. Another major news publisher has likewise compared AMP traffic with
the rest of search traffic and found that the conversion rate to subscribers is very
significantly lower with the AMP articles a mere fraction of “vanilla” search
traffic.
The reasons why AMP articles lead to lower subscriber conversion rates are many
and varied. As discussed further below, the Google products making heavy use of
AMP articles are often designed to provide a fast, free and not deeply engaging
user experience. The AMP format also can make effective branding more
difficult. It commoditizes page design, which many believe shifts more value to
the search engine or aggregator and away from the publisher. Consumers are
effectively trained to merely view publishers as websites with collection of
articles rather than coherent, immersive, and differentiated experiences with their
own unique identities and qualities that merit direct navigation, subscription, or
longer dwell times.
Further, Google has given publishers a Hobson’s choice regarding paywalls on
AMP articles – which also impacts subscriber conversion rates. Newspapers such
as The Wall Street Journal employ a highly customized paywall on their websites,
significantly varying the number of free articles that a user is permitted to read
before being asked to subscribe to the newspaper. This flexibility is highly
beneficial, allowing them to maximize engagement and increase subscriptions.
For AMP articles, however, Google restricts the paywall options. Unless
publishers rebuild their paywall options and their meters for AMP, they can only
provide all of their content for free or none of their content for free. The only
other option is to use Subscribe with Google, which has many benefits for
Google and downsides for news publishers.
14
Accordingly, unless they invest in
building another and separate paywall, news publishers who do not want to use
Subscribe with Google have a de facto all-or-nothing choice regarding the
imposition of a paywall, which lowers subscriber conversion rates.
14
These include the following: 1) Google gets the subscriber data; 2) the user must use Google Wallet or Google
Pay, instead of providing its credit card to the news publisher and establishing a direct relationship with the
publisher; and 3) Google takes a 5 to 15-percent cut. See Nushin Rashidian, George Civeris, Pete Brown, Platforms
and Publishers: The End of an Era, C
OLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW (Nov. 22, 2019), available at
https://www.cjr.org/tow_center_reports/platforms-and-publishers-end-of-an-era.php
.
10
Other newspapers have noted that the AMP format has interfered in other ways
with their methods of increasing subscriptions -- such as the lack of support for
certain interstitial windows prompting users to sign up and provide their emails,
later used for marketing subscriptions.
The fact that readers are not on the news publisher’s website but rather remain in
Google’s ecosystem for AMP articles also has impacted data collection. News
publishers do not get the same information regarding readers of their AMP
articles as from organic traffic to their websites. While Google did add some ways
of obtaining limited data about readers, for some publications they are noticeably
inferior to the data news publishers get directly on their own sites.
While ad revenues for AMP articles have been on par with non-AMP articles for
some news publishers, others have experienced a lower advertising yield from
AMP articles. Ad yield is generally lower for AMP articles for a variety of
reasons all connected to Google's control of this ecosystem: publishers are third-
parties on AMP and face cookie-matching issues (or sometimes cookie bans such
as on Safari); most ad tech providers do not have equivalent solutions on AMP as
opposed to HTML because they have not invested in a format that benefits their
largest competitor, Google; and AMP limits the number of ads and ad formats on
the AMP articles.
One major news organization compared the average number of page views by
consumers and concluded that they are materially lower for stories featured in the
AMP format. Although not all news organizations have experienced this effect,
this news company reviewed the average number of page views of users clicking
on an AMP-formatted story and determined that the average was 1.1 page views
per customer – considerably lower than the overall average for users clicking
through from all Google links. In other words, their research showed that the user
clicking through on an AMP-formatted story is “one and done” and tends to
bypass links to the news organization’s home page or other articles. As the
percentage of the total Google search landscape using the AMP format increases,
this becomes more and more of a problem for their news organization. To some
extent, these figures are likely partially attributable to the increase in mobile
traffic, but the news organization believes that the AMP format, which is used
widely now in Google search on mobile and the Google News app, has
contributed to this troubling problem.
Google’s caching of AMP articles creates very significant advantages for Google,
but it is a one-sided exchange without parallel advantages for the news publishers
as strategic partners. The fact that the user remains on the Google ecosystem is
highly beneficial to Google because it allows Google to be the first-party
and collect far more and richer user engagement data, such as the dwell rate on a
given article topic.
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While Google has gained highly valuable data – the lifeblood of its advertising
revenues – by herding the news publishers into allowing Google to cache their
articles, Google has not returned the favor by sharing its own full set of data on
the users and instead only shares limited data with the newspapers.
One of the keys ways that news publishers increasingly can provide superb
reporting and distinguish themselves from the broad swath of content in all
formats available online is by using data and interactive features in in-depth news
articles. The AMP format imposes limitations on interactive features, and it is
often sufficiently difficult to rebuild them in this format that publishers decide not
to do so. While readers can still find these articles, they are not given the same
prominence in Google products heavily reliant on AMP articles. Further, given
Google’s long-time strength in crawling and indexing text and images but not
dynamic content, Google, by dictating and limiting newspaper content in this
manner, is essentially reinforcing its market power over competitors who might
take a different approach toward such content.
Standardization of the news industry into the AMP format, which (although
available to other browsers such as Firefox, Safari, and Edge) is optimized
specifically for Google, makes it much easier for Google to index news websites
-- giving Google a significant advantage over potential competitors seeking to
enter or grow in the search and news aggregation markets. A market with
multiple players, none of whom had Google’s monopoly power, would inevitably
lead to competitive negotiations with the news industry.
B. The Problematic Terms of Service Governing AMP
Further, by being corralled into creating AMP URLs for their websites, news publishers also
became governed by terms of service that give Google vast undefined rights to use their content
in future products. Google dictates that all news publishers using the AMP URL API are
governed by the Google terms of service for APIs – terms of service not specifically designed for
AMP.
15
These terms of service raise substantial concerns. They appear to provide that merely
by creating an AMP website and using the AMP URL API, the news publishers have given
Google a “perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, sublicensable, royalty-free, and non-exclusive
license to Use content submitted, posted, or displayed to or from the APIs through your API
Client” so long as Google’s “sole purpose” is to “provide” or “improve the APIs (and the related
service(s)).” “Use” means “use, host, store, modify, communicate and publish.”
16
Google is, in
15
Google Developers, Privacy and Terms, available at https://developers.google.com/amp/cache/policies (last
visited June 3, 2020) (“Use of the Google AMP URL API is subject to the Google APIs Terms of Service and the
Google Privacy Policy.”); for APIs Terms of Service, see https://developers.google.com/terms. At least one news
publisher has been able to devote the resources necessary to develop its own in-house solution allowing it to avoid
use of Google’s AMP URL API and thus imposition of the related terms of service -- for its news articles in the
AMP format, but this requires extensive resources and is not a solution for the broader industry.
16
See Google APIs Terms of Service, ¶5(b) at Google Developers, Google APIs Terms of Service, available at
https://developers.google.com/terms
(last visited June 2, 2020). The full clause reads:
b. Submission of Content
12
effect, conditioning placement at the top of the dominant search engine—a tool ostensibly
designed to assist users in locating and navigating to content on the internet—on the granting of
intellectual property to Google.
Although subject to debate, this grant appears to give Google the right to use the newspapers’
articles in the AMP format for any Google product, whether a then current or future product.
Although some publishers anticipated that the use of their AMP content would not be limited to
mobile search results, the grant language is particularly broad and vague. This paper explores
two Google products launched after Google steered the news publishers into AMP URLs that
make heavy use of AMP content, namely the Google News app announced in May 2018 (which
is also governed by another set of terms as well) and Google Discover, announced in late
September 2018. The AMP URL API terms of use appear to have robbed news publishers of the
ability to negotiate regarding Google’s right to use their content in these new products – or others
yet to come.
In our view, the AMP URL API terms of use also amount to exclusionary and anticompetitive
conduct. A news publication does not appear to have the ability to acquiesce in the use of its
AMP content on Google mobile search, for example, while declining permission for use in the
new (and free) Google News app, which may directly compete with a newspaper’s own app or
another app licensed by the publisher. Further, the language is sufficiently broad and unclear as
to raise the question whether it gives Google the right to use the content for free for other
purposes, such as artificial intelligence, that supposedly “improve” the APIs (and may in turn
reinforce Google’s market power). Moreover, the terms give Google the right to sub-license use
of the content to third parties, including presumably for a license fee. Finally, the license is
irrevocable; although a news entity can theoretically stop creating AMP pages for its publication
and stop using Google’s AMP URL API (with all its negative consequences), Google’s right to
use the content continues indefinitely for all earlier-posted AMP pages. It is striking that these
are contractual provisions—not technical innovations—that reinforce Google’s dominant
position.
In the end, the two most fundamental problems with AMP are that Google has used its dominant
market power and the threat of lower rankings to push publishers into the AMP format, a format
and environment over which Google – and not the newspapers – appears to have near total
control, now and into the future, whatever direction Google decides to pursue. In addition, it has
used this power to create terms of use that appear to provide Google with broad leeway to use the
AMP articles in unknown, new products of Google’s own devising, without publisher control.
Although the focus of this paper is on intellectual property, Google’s conduct raises many
significant competition concerns. As reviewed below, there are two non-mutually exclusive
Some of our APIs allow the submission of content. Google does not acquire any ownership of any intellectual
property rights in the content that you submit to our APIs through your API Client, except as expressly provided in
the Terms. For the sole purpose of enabling Google to provide, secure, and improve the APIs (and the related
service(s)) and only in accordance with the applicable Google privacy policies, you give Google a perpetual,
irrevocable, worldwide, sublicensable, royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to Use content submitted, posted, or
displayed to or from the APIs through your API Client. "Use" means use, host, store, modify, communicate, and
publish. Before you submit your content to our APIs through your API Client, you will ensure that you have the
necessary rights . . . to grant us the license.”
13
avenues to address these concerns: antitrust review and an antitrust safe harbor that would allow
publishers to offset Google’s market power by negotiating collectively.
III. The Google News App: A News Aggregator in Direct Competition
with Newspapers’ Apps
On May 8, 2018, Google announced the all-new Google News, using one all-encompassing
brand name to denote what had been known as Google News on desktop, Google Play
Newsstand on mobile and desktop, and the Google News & Weather app on mobile.
17
While the
new Google News on desktop was fairly similar to the earlier version, the new Google News app
in particular features a starkly different design and functionality from its antecedents. The
Google News app makes very heavy use of AMP content, on top of the traditional feeds long
used for Google News (where publishers send their articles out on the feed).
If Google were relying on the fair use defense to justify the new Google News app, it would have
a weak case. Critically, the Google News app is primarily an aggregator rather than a search
engine – and thus has an inherently weaker claim to fair use under settled law.
18
In other words,
Google publishes content of its own selection in the Google News app, rather than simply
providing results in response to a user’s search query, with links to the original. Further, the
Google News app differs significantly from earlier versions. It presents collections of headlines
with high-quality images, with a personalized “briefing” as well as curation on major news
topics. The photos, which are zoomed in on before any snippet appears on top of them, are high
resolution, prominent and eye-catching – the stark opposite of the grainy images of Perfect 10
allowing Google to capitalize on the very significant investment that news publishers make in
photojournalism without contributing a dime. Videos created by the publisher at great effort and
expense autoplay in the app as you scroll over them. Many “Headline” news stories are
presented in an eye-catching “carousel” format, with a snippet or quote from the article
appearing over the high-quality image and above the headline as the app scrolls through a
collection of different publishers’ articles on a particular topic.
17
Trystan Upstill, The New Google News: AI Meets Human Intelligence (May 8, 2018), GOOGLE: THE KEYWORD
BLOG, available at https://blog.google/products/news/new-google-news-ai-meets-human-
intelligence/?utm_source=tw&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=io18.
18
See, e.g., Associated Press v. Meltwater US Holdings, Inc, 931 F. Supp. 2d 537 (S.D.N.Y. 2013); Fox News
Network v. TVEyes, Inc., 883 F.3d 169 (2d Cir. 2018).
14
Here is an example of a carousel of articles about the same story:
By the time the user views the full collection of articles in the “carousel” format, the user often
knows the high points of the news story. Although some news publishers get decent traffic from
the Google News app, in the view of many in the news industry the Google News app -- with its
15
aggregation of content by topic, combined with high-quality photos, headlines, and snippets in
“carousels” -- can satisfy the reader about the “news of the day” without ever having to click
through on any given story.
19
Further, the navigation features in the app make it very easy for
the user who clicks through to a news story to return to the Google News interface, rather than
going to other stories or the home page of the original news source, which is how a typical news
publisher would design the presentation of an article. In short, while any fair use defense
depends heavily on demonstrating that the new use does not substitute for or usurp the market for
the original copyrighted work, the Google News app appears to do just that for many users.
Since the Google News app likely does not qualify as fair use, Google should have negotiated
fair licenses with the news industry for use of their content in the app. In ordinary
circumstances, a licensor discloses its potential plans for using copyrighted material and
negotiates a license appropriate to the new use, with back-and-forth traded compromises. But
that is not what happened with the revised Google News app for most major newspapers. The
story once again reveals the unfair terms that Google has been able to obtain as a market
dominant platform.
The story begins several years ago with the old Google Newsstand. Many news publishers
agreed to click-through or other agreements with Google contemplating use of their content in
this particular, more benign product. But the fine print in Google’s agreements with news
publishers for Google Newsstand gave Google the right to use the news content in revisions of
the product, no matter how significant.
20
Thus, even though the format of Google Newsstand
changed significantly with the new Google News app, Google undoubtedly would argue that
these old consents apply, in addition to the Google AMP URL API terms of use discussed above.
Indeed, the terms of the current Google News Publisher Agreement begin by providing that, “If
you are already participating in Google News (formerly known as Newsstand) this Agreement
will supersede your prior online terms.”
21
These provisions are a perfect example of the grossly
unequal bargaining power between Google and the news organizations, which Google has
misused to its strong advantage to obtain apparent consent for unknown, as yet undeveloped
products.
Further, instead of negotiating a fair license -- and one specific to the new Google News app --
Google has continued to use its monopoly power to unfairly extract additional layers of consent
from the news publishers for use of their content in the Google News app, and other undisclosed
products. In part it has done so by tying together participation in the Google News website with
19
The Google News app has many of the aspects of the user interface that have been found to depress the reader’s
propensity to visit the content producer’s website -- aspects set forth in an in-depth academic study. See
Chrysanthos Dellarocase, Juliana Sutanto, Mihai Calin, Elia Palme, Attention Allocation in Information-Rich
Environments: The Case of News Aggregators, (Dec. 10, 2015), M
ANAGEMENT SCIENCE Vol. 62, No. 9: 2543-2562,
available at https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/10.1287/mnsc.2015.2237
.
20
See, e.g., Google News/ Producer, Newsstand Publisher Agreement at ¶2.1, available at
https://www.google.com/producer/legacytos
(last visited June 3, 2020).
21
Google News /Producer, News Publisher Agreement, available at https://www.google.com/producer/tos (last
updated Jan. 1, 2019) (“Google News Publisher Agreement”). While such clauses are not uncommon, circumstances
vary widely; here, Google’s product has changed significantly and the changes have a material impact on news
publishers.
16
the Google News mobile app – knowing full well that newspapers cannot realistically opt out of
Google News on the web. Moreover, publishers fear that opting out of Google News will
negatively impact their performance in search performance, since the two products are connected
in ways only Google understands and controls – and the risk of losing search rankings makes it
difficult if not impossible for publishers to opt out of Google News.
There is no escaping Google’s unfair terms. Google has stated that even if a news publisher does
not agree to the use of its content in Google News, Google has the right to crawl the news
website and include the content in all its Google News products unless the publisher blocks the
Googlebot-News (via robot.txt.), which would have the adverse effect of removing the page(s)
from the Google News index entirely – an unrealistic option.
22
If a publisher wishes to be
included in Google News, Google imposes a condition that publishers must sign up for the
Google “Publisher’s Center,” and Google has indicated that only those who do so will receive
essential “benefits” in Google News (including the app) – such as the right to “content and
branding control,” the right to “run ads inside your content area in the [Google News] app,” the
right to use paywalls through Subscribe with Google, and the ability to be eligible for the
desirable Newsstand section of the Google News app.
23
The catch-22, however, is that in order
to have a Google News Publisher account or to register with the Google News Publisher Center,
a news organization must accept the onerous Google News Producer Terms of Service (also
known as Google News Publisher Agreement).
24
The posted terms of the Google News Publisher Agreement are exceptionally slanted in
Google’s favor. News publishers are required to grant Google vast and unclear rights to use the
publishers’ news content. The required grant of rights to Google extends not only to Google
News but for all “Google Services” – defined as any products, services or technology developed
by Google from time to time.
25
In short, as a price of having their content appear on the regular
Google News website, a publisher apparently is not only required to participate in the Google
News app, and any future version of the Google News app, but any product or service developed
by Google in the future.
More specifically, the click-through agreement provides that Publisher “authorizes Google and
each Google Group Company on a worldwide . . . basis” to:
(b) use, copy, reproduce, store, display, distribute, adapt, communicate and make
copies available of Publisher Content (in each case including through caching,
Google Services, third-party websites and devices) to allow (on Publisher’s
behalf) End Users to use, adapt, download, store, access, view . . Publisher
22
See Support.google.com, Appear in Google News Publisher Center Help, available at
https://support.google.com/news/publisher-center/answer/9607025?hl=en
(last visited June 3, 2020), and
Support.google.com, Block Access to Content on Your Site Publisher Center Help, available at
https://support.google.com/news/publisher-center/answer/9605477 (last visited June 3, 2020).
23
Support.google.com, Appear in Google News Publisher Center Help, available at
https://support.google.com/news/publisher-center/answer/9607025?hl=en
(last visited June 3, 2020).
24
See Google News Publisher Agreement at https://www.google.com/producer/tos.
25
Id. at ¶ 1 (Definitions).
17
Content and copy, paste, print, annotate Publisher Content . . and do such acts as
permitted by applicable law and/or which are enabled by the functionality
provided from time to time by Google Services and/or platforms and devices
where Google News is available.”
26
Nowhere does the Google News Agreement further limit how Google can use the news
publisher’s articles, including any limitations on the display of photos or snippets on the display
pages of the Google News app. Rather, as with the prior Newsstand Publisher Agreement, the
Google News Publisher Agreement provides that Google “may add or remove functionalities or
features of Google News at any time” and “may modify the Agreement at any time.”
27
The only
“out” provided to the news publishers is not realistic: “If Publisher does not agree to any
modified terms in the Agreement, this Agreement will terminate and Publisher must remove its
Publisher Content from Google News and stop using Google News.”
28
As with other Google agreements, the Google News Agreement also contains slanted provisions
requiring news publishers to provide broad warranties and indemnities to Google, while Google
provides highly limited warranties and indemnities to the publishers.
29
While the Google News Agreement effectuates a massive land-grab from the news publishers, it
makes clear that all revenues, other than for ad slots in the news articles, go to Google: “Google
reserves the right to retain all other revenues derived from Google Services including any
revenues from ads that may appear on any search results pages.”
30
In sum, Google has used its position as a market dominant platform to strong-arm news
publishers into using their content in a product that weakens publishers and strengthens Google’s
position to extract unreasonable and often anticompetitive concessions from publishers.
IV. Google Discover: A Move Toward “Social”
In September 2018, Google announced that it was discontinuing the old Google Feed and
launching Google Discover as part of its three fundamental shifts in how it thinks about Search.
31
Google Discover is a highly customized feed targeted to the individual user with both current
news and older, evergreen content – a product far closer to social media than earlier products.
Google Discover relies heavily on articles in the AMP format. Once again, Google did not sit
down with the news publishers to negotiate a fair, use-specific license for this product. There
26
Id. at ¶2.2(b).
27
Id. at ¶2.1.
28
Id. at ¶2.1.
29
Id. at ¶6.1 and ¶6.3.
30
Since the Google News app makes heavy use of AMP content, the above-described Google API Terms of Service
would also appear to apply to AMP content on the Google News app.
31
See Karen Corby, Discover new information and inspiration with Search, no query required, GOOGLE: THE
KEYWORD BLOG (Sept. 24, 2018), available at https://www.blog.google/products/search/introducing-google-
discover/ and https://www.blog.google/products/search/improving-search-next-20-years (hereinafter “Corby”).
18
was no need because Google’s massive market power meant that it could unilaterally impose its
whims on publishers. Given their inability to bargain collectively, publishers were powerless to
resist Google’s actions.
Although it remains unclear, Google is apparently relying on the terms of use governing AMP
URL APIs for supposed “publisher consent” to use their articles in Google Discover.
32
Absent
these terms of use, Google would likely face an uphill battle convincing a court that its use of
high quality news photos in an aggregation product like Google Discover, which is not fueled by
search queries, constitutes fair use. Thus, in 2016 Google used its dominant role in search to
require publisher participation in the AMP format, and created related terms of use that appear to
give them authorization to use the AMP content in a new Google product released years later –
and one that is far more akin to social media and less beneficial to news publishers than Google
Search in several ways.
As Google proclaimed in its September 2018 announcement, its next chapter will be driven by
three fundamental shifts: 1) “the shift from answers to journeys”; 2) “the shift from queries to
providing a queryless way to get to the information”; and 3) “a shift from text to a more visual
way of finding information.”
33
In keeping with these goals, Google Discover does not rely
heavily on search queries but rather sends the user a feed with a mix of content based on either
the user’s interactions with other Google products (e.g., data on the user’s web and app activity,
location history and location settings),
34
or topics that the user has selected to follow. Articles
are grouped under numerous topic headings – thus permitting the user to customize his or her
experience. The feed includes both current news and older articles for example, articles of
interest if one were planning a trip. In addition to news articles, Google Discover also features
“videos, sports scores, entertainment updates (such as a new movie release), stock prices, event
information (such as nominees for a major awards ceremony, or the lineup of an upcoming music
festival), and more.”
35
Again, in keeping with its new goals, Google Discover includes a lot of
high quality photographs.
32
Thus, Google’s website states, “To enable large images in your Discover results… [e]nsure that Google has the
rights to display your high-quality images to users, either by using AMP or by filling out this form to express your
interest in our opt-in program.” Support.google.com, Google Discover: Optimize your content on Discover,
available at https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/9046777?hl=en
(last visited June 3, 2020).
33
Ben Gomes, Search: Improving Search for the next 20 years, GOOGLE: THE KEYWORD BLOG (Sept.24,
2018), available at https://www.blog.google/products/search/improving-search-next-20-years
(last visited June 9,
2020).
34
Support.google.com, Customize what you find in Discover, available at
https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/2819496?co=GENIE.Platform%3DAndroid&hl=en
(last visited June
3, 2020).
35
Karen Corby, Discover new information and inspiration with Search, no query required, GOOGLE: THE KEYWORD
BLOG
(Sept. 24, 2018), available at https://www.blog.google/products/search/introducing-google-discover/
19
A quick comparison of screenshots from the original Google Feed (on the left)
36
, which mostly
featured news headlines, short descriptions and occasional photos, and Google Discover (on the
right) vividly displays the differences:
Google is giving Google Discover broad visibility. Not only is it on the Google app, but it is
featured prominently as an option on Chrome’s mobile homepage. In short, the mobile
homepage gives users the ability to embark on their “search journey” via search query or via
Discover.
News publishers have several concerns about Google Discover, in addition to their fundamental
objections regarding use of their content without compensation and Google’s failure to negotiate
a specific agreement with them targeted to this use.
First, publishers are concerned about subscriber conversion rates. Generally speaking,
search is the gold standard for subscriber conversion, since users looking for specific
content are the most engaged audience and therefore most likely to be willing to
subscribe. News publishers have a far lower subscriber conversion rate on social media
traffic than search (other than for paid content). Google Discover is essentially a social
experience – one for the drifting Internet user. As one blogger described it, “Discover
gives lean-back consumers . . . a platform to gobble up highly-personalized entertainment
that has Google’s name on it”
37
– and such lean-back consumers are less likely to be
36
The source for this image is JR Raphael, The Google feed has lost its soul, COMPUTER WORLD (Oct. 3, 2017),
available at https://www.computerworld.com/article/3229933/google-feed.html
.
37
Gordon Donnelly, So Long Google Feed; Hello, Google Discover, WORDSTREAM: BLOG (Aug. 19, 2019),
available at https://www.wordstream.com/blog/ws/2018/09/28/google-discover
.
20
willing to pay for content. Further, as noted above, some publishers already experience
far lower subscriber conversion rates with articles in the AMP format, heavily featured in
Google Discover. This one-two punch raises particular concerns as news publishers rely
more heavily on subscriptions as digital advertising revenues remain disappointing.
Second, publishers are at Google’s whim regarding its selection of content for Google
Discover – more so than with search, where Google has historically, generally (although
with faults) displayed the most responsive articles to a query. Although it is clear that
Google Discover prefers articles in the AMP format and with high-quality photographs,
its other criteria for selection for the current news articles and evergreen content are
unknown.
Third, news publishers are concerned that with all the sports scores, weather, video
content, paid content, entertainment updates, and other distractions on Google Discover,
users will be less focused on news articles.
Fourth, news publishers are concerned that Google Discover is a product geared too
heavily to advertisers and one that will be far more lucrative for Google than Search.
Being able to target consumers based on subject-matter buckets that they follow is a
highly powerful tool for advertisers. As Google has announced, it will include sponsored
content labeled as advertisements in between the news articles on Google Discover.
Google presumably will get all or most of the revenue from this sponsored content -- as
opposed to the smaller cut paid to Google’s ad tech service for placing advertisements
within news articles. News publishers fear that Google Discover will permit Google to
siphon off more of the revenues sold against their content than Google Search.
V. Google Search: Becoming A Walled Garden
News publishers have different but equally pressing concerns about the direction of Google
Search – in both desktop and mobile. As stated above, in 2018 Google itself disclosed
fundamental shifts in its view of search, including a shift to more visual ways of finding
information – but these are only part of the problem from the publishers’ perspective. For many
years, Google Search results consisted of simple blue links with only a headline and very short
snippet from an article. Today, Google Search makes heavy use of premier news content,
including high quality news photos. Google uses this content to enhance its own brand –
especially in an era plagued by fake news – and earns substantial advertising revenues for
aggregating content it did not create or fund. Moreover, news publishers worry that Google
Search is increasingly becoming more of a publisher than a search engine, supplying sufficient
content to substitute for their publications. This violates the core assumption at the foundation of
the Perfect 10 case.
Thus, one growing concern for the news industry is the current length of snippets from their
articles, which often can collectively provide ample information on any news story to satisfy the
casual reader skimming the news. Google is able to use its role as the market dominant platform
to pressure newspapers into providing “rich snippets” for search. If these rich snippets are not on
properly optimized pages (meaning the publisher implemented Google-dictated structured data
and markup properly, and the images are of requisite quality and size), the newspaper is put at
21
competitive disadvantage. As illustrated by the examples and screenshots detailed below, a
second, broader concern is the format and wide range of content presented by Google on today’s
search results pages, usually above the traditional headlines and links to news articles – changes
which undoubtedly decrease the chances that a user will click on a news link. Many have quoted
the stunning statistic that, “In June of 2019, for the first time, a majority of all browser-based
searches on Google.com resulted in zero clicks. We’ve passed a milestone in Google’s evolution
from search engine to walled-garden.”
38
The situation is even more stark on mobile: in the past
three years, “[o]rganic has fallen by almost 20%, while paid has nearly tripled and zero-click
searches are up significantly. . . . Today . . . almost 2/3rds [of mobile searches ended without a
click].”
39
Thus, while Google still sends substantial traffic to news websites, it is clear that it has
wholly abandoned early Larry Page’s approach where he stated: “We want to get you out of
Google and to the right place as fast as possible.”
Here are two examples of Google search results:
38
Rand Fiskin, Less than Half of Google Searches Now Result in a Click, SPARKTORO: BLOG (Aug. 13, 2019),
available at https://sparktoro.com/blog/less-than-half-of-google-searches-now-result-in-a-click/
(citing studies by
Jumpstart, the data arm of Avast).
39
Id.
22
Examples of the expanded content presented in Google Search results before traditional news
headlines and links include the following. First, sometimes Google Search simply provides the
answer to a question, such as “Who owns National Geographic?”
23
Second, Google currently is making extensive use of “featured snippets,” including on mobile.
These are special boxes where the format of regular listings is reversed, showing the descriptive
snippet first before the link. (Featured snippets commonly contain only one link for the listing.)
Featured snippets are often sufficiently lengthy and comprehensive that the user is far less likely
to click on any news link; they also push regular news links farther down the search page. One
2017 study analyzed two million featured snippets and found that when a featured snippet is
present, the first organic result showed a significant drop in click-through rate.
40
Not
surprisingly, since newspapers are all in competition with one another, there is substantial
pressure to provide sufficiently lengthy snippets to draw traffic or be selected for the “featured
snippet” on any given topic.
Google’s website states that news publishers can only opt out of featured snippets by
“remov[ing] all snippets on your page, including those in regular search results.”
41
In other
words, a news publisher cannot decide to opt out of featured snippets without removing all
textual snippets from its ordinary search results – which would be suicidal.
40
See Tim Soulo, Ahrefs’ Study of 2 Million Featured Snippets:10 Important Takeaways, AHREFS: BLOG (APR. 7,
2020), available at https://ahrefs.com/blog/featured-snippets-study/; see also Barry Schwartz, Another Study shows
how featured snippets steal significant traffic from the top organic results, SEARCH ENGINE LAND (May 30, 2017,
10:25 a.m.), available at https://searchengineland.com/another-f
eatured-snippet-study-shows-steal-significant-
traffic-first-organic-result-275967 (summarizing Ahrefs’ study).
41
Support.google.com, Featured snippets and your website, available at
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/6229325?hl=en
(last visited June 9, 2020).
24
Third, Google also has introduced the “People Also Ask” feature in Google Search, which
generally provides questions and answers, often with a link to Wikipedia – reducing newspaper
traffic.
Where the “People Also Ask” feature displays newspaper content, it provides lengthy snippets
akin to the “featured snippets,” which often provide sufficient information that a reader will not
feel the need to click through to the original site.
25
Fourth, Google often places ads and other sponsored content in search results, often pushing
news links farther down the page and reducing the likelihood that a user will click on a news
link. This is frequently the case in searches for consumer products that are reviewed in “service
journalism” -- publications like Consumer Reports, Reviewed or The Wirecutter. Searches for
topics such as “best outdoor grills” are crowded with all sorts of ads and sponsored content
before the publishers’ organic search results. Moreover, as can be seen below, Google is using
snippets of news content as specific promotions for individual products, all to its commercial
benefit; for example, if the user clicks on these products, they link to a shopping module. In other
words, Google is using the news media’s content to advance its chance of selling the product at
issue, without compensation to the publisher – and circumventing the user’s need to visit the
publishers’ web sites and an opportunity for publishers to earn a share of affiliate revenues.
All told, the changes in Google Search and its movement toward a “walled garden” raise
significant concerns for news publishers, who rely heavily on Google Search traffic and whose
content is instead used for Google’s own purposes.
News publishers also have other concerns about Google Search unrelated to Google’s
movements toward a “walled garden.” They also have expressed concerns that their rankings on
Google Search have fallen when they have decreased the number of free articles offered before
requiring a subscription. As they have explained, the Google algorithm can detect when users
leave a newspaper’s page – as they often do when hitting a paywall -- and this lowers search
rankings. As the premier newspapers increasingly make use of paywalls to fund their
operations, these practices by Google have troubling implications.
26
News publishers also are angered about Google’s apparent use of news content they have
authorized for use in Google Search in entirely different Google products, including Google
Assistant. Google Assistant is but one of the growing “Voice-first” Google platforms. The
Google website states that, “If you search with the Google Assistant, featured snippets may also
be read aloud.”
42
The full extent of this practice is not known, but in a limited review the news
publishers have certainly found examples. When Google Assistant provides an audio response,
that audio response obviously does not contain any link to the original article. In short, in that
setting, the quid pro quo that supports any fair use defense is absent. While some publishers
have affirmatively opted-in by using structured data known as “speakable markup” (used to
signal consent to Google for use of excerpts in text-to-speech), most of the news industry has not
provided knowing consent to this use of their content on Google Assistant. That apparently has
not stopped Google. Google is currently paying license fees to some publishers for custom-
tailored audio content on Google Assistant, but the full extent of Google’s use of news content
for Google Assistant remains opaque but certainly goes far beyond those few publishers that
have given actual consent. It is widely expected that Google Voice is the new frontier and, as
with Google Search and Google News, publishers have substantial concerns regarding
attribution, monetization, traffic and audience data, and customer relationship issues relating to
use of their content that need to be far better addressed. Google’s use of content authorized for
one product in another product entirely in very different circumstances is yet another example of
Google’s misuse of its power as a market dominant platform.
VI. Needed Steps to Combat Google’s Behavior
As the facts outlined above portray, news publishers have not had the ability to rely on copyright
law to protect their publications in the face of Google’s near monopoly power, which Google
repeatedly deploys to extract undue concessions from the news publishers and increase that
market dominance. In the Perfect 10 case, Google got a significant “win” on a fundamentally
different set of facts, and then grew so large and powerful that no individual news publisher has
genuine negotiation muscle against it to enforce their rights. Thus, no matter what copyright
protection the newspapers are rightfully due under the Copyright Act -- which is there to protect
their ability to flourish and incentive to create -- there has been a market failure in their ability to
obtain adequate compensation or control over the current and future use of their content. This is
one among several causes that have greatly damaged the news publisher industry, leading to the
decline of high-quality coverage of public affairs, including local news, to the detriment of all
citizens. Such coverage is especially necessary in these challenging times, as truth is subject to
attack and the ability of governments to grapple with pressing political challenges such as
climate change and the corruption of politics by special interests becomes ever more pressing.
All of this makes it imperative that there be some structural solution to address Google’s market
dominance and ability to dictate grossly one-sided terms that can be changed at its whim at any
time as well as its ability to play one publisher against another. After all, no news publisher
42
Support.google.com, How Google’s featured snippets work, available at
https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/9351707?p=featured_snippets&hl=en&visit_id=6371271823159
86847-2628332654&rd=1 (last visited June 3, 2020); see also Danny Sullivan, A Reintroduction to Google’s
Featured Snippets, GOOGLE: THE KEYWORD BLOG (Jan. 30, 2018), available at
https://www.blog.google/products/search/reintroduction-googles-featured-snippets/.
27
can afford to be the lone publication standing up to Google, while its competitors cave in to
Google’s unfair demands and get the resulting traffic. The concern extends far more broadly than
the current versions of Google Search, Google Discover, and the Google News app. Rather, the
concern only amplifies as one looks into the future – including for example, the unknown extent
to which Google intends to use newspaper content in Google Voice and to develop artificial
intelligence. Google Voice is anticipated to be highly important for Google, whether via Google
Assistant or other platforms, and Google’s anticipated use of artificial intelligence to develop
answers to questions is a hot topic in news circles.
43
A. The EU Adopts A Publisher’s Right and Abuse of Economic
Dependence Principles
In the European Union, similar concerns recently have led to extensive studies and important
legal changes. Last year, the EU adopted a “Publisher’s Right” as part of the “Directive on
Copyright in the Digital Single Market” (the “Directive”).
44
Each country in the EU must now
enact implementing legislation, which France has already done. The Publisher’s Right
essentially gives press publications the right to compensation for use of their works by
“information society service providers” – except for “the use of individual words or very short
extracts of press publications.”
45
While “very short excerpts” are not defined, the Directive
makes clear that “it is important that the exclusion of very short extracts be interpreted in such a
way as not to affect the effectiveness of the rights provided for in this Directive.”
46
The
Directive clarifies that the rights granted to publishers do not extend to acts of hyperlinking or
“mere facts.”
The Directive is expressly based on the public policy considerations at stake. It recognizes that
“[a] free and pluralistic press is essential to ensure quality journalism and citizens’ access to
information” and that a thriving press “provides a fundamental contribution to public debate and
the proper functioning of a democratic society.”
47
It seeks to address the “problems”
experienced by press publications “in licensing the online use of their publications” to online
services both in light of the publications’ need to “recoup their investments” and as a matter of
equity -- concluding that the “reuse of press publications” constitutes an “important part of the[ ]
43
See, e.g., Cade Metz, Google’s Hand-Fed AI Now Gives Answers, Not Just Search Results, WIRED (Nov. 29, 2019
7:00 a.m.), available at
https://www.wired.com/2016/11/googles-search-engine-can-now-answer-questions-human-
help/; Katrina Brooker, Google’s quantum bet on the future of AI and what it means for humanity, FAST COMPANY
(Sept. 17, 2019), available at https://www.fastcompany.com/90396213/google-quantum-supremacy-future-ai-
humanity.
44
Official Journal of the European Union, Directive (EU) 2019/790 of the European Parliament and of the Council
of 17 April 2019 on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market and amending Directives 96/9/EC,
available at https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32019L0790&from=EN
(last visited
June 8, 2020)
45
Id. at 13.
46
Id.
47
Id. at 12.
28
business models” of online services and “a source of revenue.”
48
The Directive is premised on a
recognition of the market dominance of the major platforms. As the [Commission Staff Working
Document Impact Assessment] stated, “Online service providers often have a strong bargaining
position and receive the majority of advertising revenues generated online . . . . This makes it
difficult for press publishers to negotiate with them on an equal footing, including regarding the
share of revenues related to the use of their content.”
49
It is far too early to determine the ultimate impact of the EU Publisher’s Right. Thus far, Google
has publicly stated that it will not pay press publications for search results and will instead limit
the detail in its search listings, citing an experiment purportedly demonstrating that in such
instances, traffic will go to non-news sites, thus harming news publishers. In April 2020, the
French Competition Authority found that Google was abusing its monopoly position in search to
circumvent the French version of the Publisher’s Right and ordered it to engage in negotiations
under stated conditions.
50
Google’s behavior is in keeping with its earlier response to similar legislation. In 2014, Spain
and Germany enacted laws permitting publishers to charge Google for displaying snippets in
search results, or to prohibit Google from doing so. A consortium of German publishers initially
told Google that it could not display snippets or images in its search results; when Google
complied (displaying only headlines), traffic to major news publishers crashed so significantly
that within two weeks, Germany’s largest publisher reversed course.
51
In response to the
Spanish law, Google chose to shut down Google News in Spain altogether rather than pay
publishers for their content
52
; as a result, studies documented an immediate reduction in traffic
falling on smaller publishers.
53
However, recent reports show that over time online traffic trends
48
Id. at 12-13.
49
Commission Staff Working Document Impact Assessment on the modernization of EU copyright rules
Accompanying the document Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on copyright
in the Digital Single Market and Proposal for a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council laying
down rules on the exercise of copyright and related rights applicable to certain online transmissions of broadcasting
organisations and retransmissions of television and radio programmes (Sept. 16, 2016) at p. 160, available at
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/DOC/?uri=CELEX:52016SC0301&from=EN
.
50
See Decision no. 20-MC-01 of the Autorité de la Concurrence of 9 April 2020 concerning the requests for
provisional remedies submitted by the Syndicat des editeurs de las presse magazine, Alliance de la press
d’information generale inter alia, and Agence France-Press.
51
See Harro Ten Wolde, Eric Auchard, Germany’s top publisher bows to Google in new licensing row, REUTERS,
(Nov. 5, 2014 10:35 a.m.), available at
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-google-axel-sprngr/germanys-top-
publisher-bows-to-google-in-news-licensing-row-idUSKBN0IP1YT20141105; Colin Lecher, German publisher
caves to Google News after massive traffic drop, THE VERGE (Nov. 5, 2014 12:47 p.m.), available at
https://www.theverge.com/2014/11/5/7160587/german-publisher-axel-springer-google-news.
52
Google Europe Blog, An update on Google News Spain (Dec. 11, 2014), available at
https://europe.googleblog.com/2014/12/an-update-on-google-news-in-spain.html
.
53
Susan Athey, Markus M. Mobius, Jeno Pal, The Impact of Aggregators on Internet News Consumption¸(abstract),
S
OCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH NETWORK (Jan. 11, 2017), available at
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2897960
29
for select Spanish news sites seem to have remained largely unchanged, with the total number of
unique monthly visitors actually increasing with many publishers.
54
The EU Publisher’s Right holds promise for European news publishers, although the last chapter
on its implementation has yet to be written. Whatever its ultimate impact, the EU and American
legal systems are very different. The EU Publisher’s Right is most salient in the U.S. as a
reflection of a fundamental principle regarding the value of news content to be attained through
some vehicle, even if not in the exact manner as the EU. Certainly, the EU’s adoption of a
Publisher’s Right underscores the legitimate nature of the news publishers’ concerns reflected in
this paper and the necessity for action.
Another EU legal development may provide more concrete possibilities for U.S. legislation that
would provide redress for the news publishers’ concerns with Google. In France, Belgium,
Germany and other jurisdictions, there are laws governing the abuse of economic dependence,
which focus on situations in which one party has a significant share of the relevant market
55
and
abuses its power over those highly reliant on it as a supplier. The French law broadly prohibits
“the abusive exploitation by a company . . . of the state of economic dependence” (Article L.
420-2 of the Code de Commerce) listing as examples a refusal to sell, tied selling or
discriminatory practices. The German abuse of economic dependence provisions have an even
greater sweep and are not confined to prohibiting practices such as those listed above that affect
overall competition.
56
More broadly speaking, commentators have proposed and analyzed
potential Platform-to-Business (P2B) regulations in recognition of the superior bargaining
position often held by platforms in relation to their business users, which can lead to unfair
practices.
57
Notably, French news publishers recently raised the laws against abuse of economic
dependence in the above-described April 2020 case before the French Competition Authority
finding that Google was abusing its monopoly position in the general online search market to
54
Newsmediaalliance.org, The Effects of the Ancillary Right for News Publishers in Spain and the Resulting Google
News Closure (Nov. 2019), available at
http://www.newsmediaalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Final-
Revised-Spain-Report_11-7-19.pdf (last visited June 3, 2020).
55
As the French Competition Authority recently summarized: “In order to characterize a situation of economic
dependence, it is . . . necessary to assess whether the following four criteria are met: (i) the brand of the respondent
enjoys sufficient notoriety; (ii) the latter has a significant market share in the relevant market; (iii) its share in the
turnover of the company possibly in a situation of economic dependence is significant; and (iv) the said company
does not have an alternative solution under comparable technical and economic conditions.” See Decision no. 20-
MC-01 of the Autorité de la Concurrence of 9 April 2020 concerning the requests for provisional remedies
submitted by the Syndicat des editeurs de las presse magazine, Alliance de la press d’information generale inter alia,
and Agence France-Press.
56
See, e.g., Inge Graef, Differentiated Treatment in Platform-to-Business Relations: EU Competition Law and
Economic Dependence,
OXFORD ACADEMIC: YEARBOOK OF EUROPEAN LAW (Nov. 12, 2019), Vol. 38 at pp. 448 499,
available at https://academic.oup.com/yel/article/doi/10.1093/yel/yez008/5622729
(hereinafter “Graef,”).
57
Id.
30
circumvent the French version of the Publisher’s Right – although the abuse of economic
dependence claim was not ultimately decided in that decision.
58
The “abuse of economic dependence” concept goes to the heart of the problem between Google
and the American news publishers and has some of the same strains as unfair competition law in
the United States. While U.S. antitrust laws do not currently recognize exploitative abuse of
economic dependence, this concept could be used in U.S. legislation to protect news publishers
who are in a state of economic dependence on Google on two fronts: traffic and advertising. As
evidenced by the history set forth above, Google’s superior bargaining power as the dominant
market player is so out sized that it has made it effectively impossible for the newspapers to
enforce their rights under the Copyright Act, especially as Google plays one publisher off
another. They have been forced to consent in one fashion or other to use of their conduct beyond
the boundaries of fair use without remuneration. In short, intellectual property law has become
an ineffectual protection in the face of Google’s market power abuse and many newspapers are
being hampered in their ability to provide the reporting that plays a critical role in our
democracy. While legislation built on concepts of “abuse of economic dependence” and unfair
competition would be somewhat novel in its approach, it is worth considering such legislation in
the context of platform use of news content since it is both appropriate and critical for Congress
to directly address Google’s market power abuse outlined here. Such legislation could define
and target specific practices that constitute exploitative abuse of news content by market
dominant platforms, including some of the objectionable practices highlighted in this paper.
Further, these concepts could well inform broader principles to be employed by anti-trust
regulators, as well as negotiations between the news publishers and Google under the proposed
safe harbor legislation discussed below.
B. News Media Alliance Recommendations
The News Media Alliance makes the following recommendations for action by the United States
Congress and federal and state Attorneys General:
Antitrust enforcers must remain vigilant and address Google’s abuse of market
power. In 2019, the U.S. Department of Justice and an unprecedented working
group of 50 state attorneys general each announced broad antitrust investigations
of Google. It is imperative that these investigations explore and address the root
causes of Google’s market power. Enforcers must take steps to curb Google’s
abuses and, if necessary, impose structural and/or other remedies to ensure that
publishers have the ability to negotiate fairly and benefit from competition for the
distribution and monetization of their news. Among other things, antitrust
enforcers should examine Google’s conduct regarding AMP, including Google’s
uses of its dominant search results page to enforce its unilateral AMP standard
and Google’s use of the AMP standard to access key consumer data. Federal and
58
See Decision no. 20-MC-01 of the Autorité de la Concurrence of 9 April 2020 relating to the requests for
provisional measures presented by the Syndicat des editeurs de las presse magazine, Alliance de la press
d’information generale inter alia, and Agence France-Press, A
UTORITÈ DE LA CONCURRENCE (Apr. 9, 2020),
available at
https://www.autoritedelaconcurrence.fr/fr/decision/relative-des-demandes-de-mesures-conservatoires-
presentees-par-le-syndicat-des-editeurs-de.
31
state enforcers should investigate and address Google’s practices that force
publishers to flatten their content in a manner that supports Google’s business
model by commoditizing content, discouraging innovation in the presentation of
content, and devaluing the differentiated and immersive experience offered by
publishers. Courts have also been presented disturbing evidence of
anticompetitive practices in the advertising ecosystem, including revelations
around “header bidding,” a tool which would have produced more advertising
revenue for publishers and was actively discouraged by Google.
59
Courts have
been presented disturbing evidence of anticompetitive practices in the advertising
ecosystem, including revelations around “header bidding,” a tool which would
have produced more advertising revenue for publishers and was actively
discouraged by Google.
60
The News Media Alliance believes that the issues
presented by the news industry are among the most critical posed, given the
important role of newspapers, including local newspapers, in a functioning
democracy, and the perilous state of the legacy news industry. As the European
Publishers Council and its allies eloquently stated, “Press freedom is not just a
function of the law. It also depends on a market that can generate sufficient
returns for the huge financial investments required, and to cover the enormous
legal and commercial risks of the news media business.”
Second, the News Media Alliance advocates the passage of legislation it has
proposed allowing news publishers to bargain collectively with Google. The
perverse current state of affairs is that Google can use its massive and unchecked
market power to negotiate with publishers, but publishers cannot join forces to
negotiate collectively. The bipartisan legislation, the Journalism Competition and
Preservation Act, was introduced as H.R. 2054, with an identical Senate version
(S.1700) to address this extreme market and legal failure. Copyright reform alone
will not work if Google can use its market power to extract exploitative,
exclusionary, and anticompetitive terms from publishers. News publishers face a
collective action problem and cannot negotiate effectively indeed, at all -- in
one-off negotiations with Google. An appropriately tailored safe harbor – like the
Journalism Competition and Preservation Act – will help begin to restore some
semblance of a balance of power by giving publishers the ability to begin
offsetting Google’s power as a market dominant player in search and news
aggregation. The time has come for antitrust law to work by addressing Google’s
Standard Oil-sized market power, not by penalizing or restraining the smaller
businesses attempting to offset Google’s power through limited collective
negotiations.
Third, news publishers should be compensated for their content, and Congress
should explore various means toward that end. The News Media Alliance
59
In re Google Digital Advertising Antitrust Litigation, Civ. Action No. 1:21-md-3010-PKC (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 14,
2022). ¶ ¶ 363-365, 413 available at https://texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/images/child-support/
60
In re Google Digital Advertising Antitrust Litigation, Civ. Action No. 1:21-md-3010-PKC (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 14,
2022). ¶ ¶ 363-365, 413.
https://texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/images/child-
support/20220114_195_0_States%20Third%20Amended%20Complaint.pdf
32
encourages Congress to strengthen the intellectual property rights of news
publishers, including revisiting federal copyright preemption to establish rules
allowing state misappropriation claims to survive in a narrowly prescribed
manner. Congress should also consider legislation that would facilitate licensing
of digital content. The News Media Alliance also calls on the Copyright Office to
issue regulations providing for a practical process for the registration of copyright
for dynamic digital content such as that contained on digital news properties.
Further, the News Media Alliance calls on Google to adopt the following principles, and for
Congress, courts, antitrust enforcers, and regulators likewise to act based on the following
principles:
Google should genuinely treat news publishers as strategic players in a mutually
dependent ecosystem, recognizing that without their critical content, Google
would be significantly impaired. Broadly speaking, Google should consider the
impact on the news industry of all of its actions in order to ensure that all
stakeholders in the ecosystem will prosper.
Google should base its actions on the principle that news publishers have the right
to control the specific uses of their content by Google and should not be forced to
“consent” or accede to unknown or undesired uses of their articles and
photographs by being presented with untenable alternatives.
Google should stop using features or benefits necessary to secure high search
rankings to coerce agreement to other undesired terms, or condition search
rankings on publisher participation in any other Google products.
Google should pay news publishers a fair share of the value of their content to
Google. There are many ways this could be structured, so long as the total
consideration accurately represents an equitable distribution given Google and the
news publishers’ respective contributions and the enormous value to Google of
the data it collects in news searches, rather than the structural imbalance between
Google and the news industry in terms of negotiation power.
Google should share more user data with the news publishers.
Google should not use its power over news publishers to collect and use data that
users would be providing to publishers, as it does with Google Subscribe.
Google should revise the user interfaces for Google Search results, Google
Discover and the Google News app in a manner that will increase the chances that
users will click on news links, rather than increasing the chances that the
consumer will use these Google products as a substitute for the original news
publication.
Google should adopt a completely new approach for its terms of service and other
agreements with news publishers, and renounce reliance on all such prior
33
documents. In order to foster fair negotiations and a true “meeting of the minds”
with genuine consent, Google should:
o Inform the news publishers of intended desired uses of newspaper content
in sufficient detail to permit knowledgeable negotiations;
o Engage in a meaningful “give and take” with the news industry to address
their concerns, rather than effectively forcing them to agree to non-
negotiable contracts of adhesion;
o Negotiate agreements pertaining to one product, not multiple products
o Cease any tying arrangements or other provisions that require news
publishers who want to consent to one use of their content to agree to
other uses of their content, including features within a given product.
o Revise its “grant of rights” clauses significantly, so that they are both
circumscribed and clear.
o Cease the use of any provisions providing in sum or substance that
“Google may add or remove functionalities or features at any time,” and
that “Google may modify the agreement at any time.”
o Agree to a fairer distribution of risk through more equal indemnification
provisions.
Google should engage in transparent and fair negotiations with news publishers
regarding any uses of their content in Google Voice and artificial intelligence.
In conclusion, long ago the courts gave Google certain limited legal protections, believing that it
was engaged in good faith, fair uses of third-party content, and ultimately acting in the public
interest. Now, the balance is upset, leading to significant societal ramifications and harm to the
free press. The News Media Alliance calls upon both the government and Google to address
these urgent problems.