الثلاثاء، 13 يوليو 2021

France fines Google US$593 million in copyright lawsuit by Agence France-Presse

 




Paris, January 21. (Reuters) French publisher advocacy organization and Google announced on Thursday that they are paying for U.T. news publishers for online content for the first time in Europe. Personal licensing agreements for French publications, some of which have fallen sharply with the development of the Internet and the decrease in printing volume. The lawyer involved in the negotiations, Facebook (FB.O), said that this transaction, which Google describes as a sustainable payment method for publishers, may be closely watched by other platforms. Facebook cannot be used for imprisonment immediately. Alphabet's (GOOGLE.O) and Alliance de la pressse d'information générale (APIG) said in a statement. The breakdown includes criteria such as daily publication volume, monthly Internet traffic, and "political information and general contributions". A Google spokesperson said that so far, Google has only signed a license agreement with a few French publications, including the French national newspaper Le Monde and Le Figaro, which takes into account the framework conditions reached with APIG.Google’s tool called Google News Showcase for paid news publishers is currently only available in Brazil and Germany. Reuters confirmed on Thursday that it has signed an agreement with Google to become the first global news provider to showcase Google News. Owned by news and information provider Thomson Reuters (TRI.TO). "Reuters is committed to developing new methods to provide reliable, high-quality global news at important moments like never before," said Eric Danetz, Google Revenue Director of Reuters, who did not do so at APIG. under. How much funds are allocated among APIG members, including most French national and local publishers. No details on how to calculate the premium were disclosed. After months of negotiations between Google, French publishers and news organizations on how to implement the updated EU copyright rules, the rules will allow publishers to criminalize online platforms that showcase Google’s look and feel, the world’s largest search engine Publishers who initially opposed the idea of ​​paying for content. Claims that its website has benefited from increased traffic.

 




Paris, January 21. (Reuters) French publisher advocacy organization and Google announced on Thursday that they are paying for U.T. news publishers for online content for the first time in Europe. Personal licensing agreements for French publications, some of which have fallen sharply with the development of the Internet and the decrease in printing volume. The lawyer involved in the negotiations, Facebook (FB.O), said that this transaction, which Google describes as a sustainable payment method for publishers, may be closely watched by other platforms. Facebook cannot be used for imprisonment immediately. Alphabet's (GOOGLE.O) and Alliance de la pressse d'information générale (APIG) said in a statement. The breakdown includes criteria such as daily publication volume, monthly Internet traffic, and "political information and general contributions". A Google spokesperson said that so far, Google has only signed a license agreement with a few French publications, including the French national newspaper Le Monde and Le Figaro, which takes into account the framework conditions reached with APIG.Google’s tool called Google News Showcase for paid news publishers is currently only available in Brazil and Germany. Reuters confirmed on Thursday that it has signed an agreement with Google to become the first global news provider to showcase Google News. Owned by news and information provider Thomson Reuters (TRI.TO). "Reuters is committed to developing new methods to provide reliable, high-quality global news at important moments like never before," said Eric Danetz, Google Revenue Director of Reuters, who did not do so at APIG. under. How much funds are allocated among APIG members, including most French national and local publishers. No details on how to calculate the premium were disclosed. After months of negotiations between Google, French publishers and news organizations on how to implement the updated EU copyright rules, the rules will allow publishers to criminalize online platforms that showcase Google’s look and feel, the world’s largest search engine Publishers who initially opposed the idea of ​​paying for content. Claims that its website has benefited from increased traffic.

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