Australians May Soon Face Life Without Google

Why is the tech giant threatening an entire country? You might soon need Bing to find the answer.

In order to write this piece, I did a lot of Googling. First, a quick Google to read up on the story’s latest developments, and then a longer Google, gathering as much backstory as I could. I Googled to find the last piece Slate did touching on this topic so I could link to it, and I Googled to confirm exactly what Google had recently said about it. I have no idea how I would do my job without Google, and frankly, I don’t want to find out. But I may soon have to.

For more than two years, the Australian government has been working toward the implementation of a News Media Bargaining Code, regulating relations between the digital giants and news outlets, and forcing the former to negotiate payment with the latter for showing previews of their stories (under the currently proposed version of the code, if the parties are unable to reach a consensus, the case goes to arbitrator, who picks and enforces one of their offers).

The mandatory code, developed by Australia’s Competition and Consumer Commission after voluntary negotiations stalled, would also require tech companies to inform publishers of significant changes to their search and news feed algorithms and tell publishers what data it collects on their users.

future tense

So far, the code has been fiercely resisted by Facebook and Google, which claim that they are actually doing media outlets a favor by publicising their stories. Late last year, Facebook went to war with Australia over the code and has been threatening to ban users from sharing news on its platform if the code becomes law, rather than be forced to pay for it. It’s not clear whether Facebook will follow through on the threat, leaving Aussies scrolling through a news-free news feed a blessing, some might say. But while Facebook has only intimated banning news, Google has gone nuclear.

In a parliamentary inquiry on January 22, Google said it would have “no real choice but to stop making Google Search available in Australia” if the government went ahead with the current version of the code. That means not just news, which makes up just 1.25% of searches on the platform, but all searches. Managing director of Google Australia and New Zealand Mel Silva told a hearing that the proposed code was “untenable” for them, presenting an “unreasonable and unmanageable levels of financial and operational risk.” Silva said Google still wanted to find to an outcome that was “workable for all parties,” calling their departure “our worst-case scenario.” As one senator responded, “that’s a hell of a threat.”

(Google Australia is also playing around with a chilling “experiment,” intermittently blocking 1% of Australian users from seeing local news stories in their searches, in order “to measure the impacts of news businesses and Google Search on each other.” Under the experiment, Google doesn’t link to major publications’ homepages even when Googled by name, offering links to Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, or Wikipedia handles instead.)

Australia is standing relatively firm on the code, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison saying “we don’t respond to threats” (or personal lobbying from Mark Zuckerberg, for that matter). The government is refusing to blink, unwilling to bow to a megacorporation that is refusing to negotiate in good faith, with it or publishers it seems. The Council of Small Business Organisations says Australia should ignore the threats and press ahead with a code, despite the blow the loss of search would be to both businesses and consumers, with Google needing “strong and stringent” regulation due to its monopoly.

Google Australia is intermittently blocking 1% of Australian users from seeing local news stories in their searches, to measure the impacts of news businesses and Google Search on each other. Source: Reuters

As with Facebook’s threat, Google has attempted to convince users that it is the victim, and that it is the big bad Australian government that is forcing it to leave. In recent days, the search engine has inserted a pop-up into its own search results, stating, “You may have heard about a proposed law. We are willing to pay to support journalism,” with a link to “Hear our proposal.” The link goes to a somewhat Orwellian YouTube video, in which a friendly and concerned Silva, sitting at a desk with faint Google lettering behind her, warns that the new code will “break how Google Search works in Australia. … I know that sounds pretty full on, but it’s true,” she adds.

Also read: Time to Regulate Big Tech Monopoly Over Information, Commerce and Power

The video in turn links to Google’s alternate suggestion of a “workable news code”: Google News Showcase, a news product announced in 2020 and currently running in Germany and Brazil, in which the company pays publications for their curated content, but more on its own terms. Google has already struck deals with smaller local publishers to create an Australian version and plans to accelerate its rollout to next month to prove it a better way of compensating publishers.

And much like Facebook, it’s not clear whether Google would follow through on its ultimatum, or is simply engaging in brinkmanship in a desperate bid to see the code defeated. Google is suggesting taking search away from a 25 million person population, worth around AU$4.8 billion (US$3.7 billion) to the company in annual revenue not a lot in the scheme of things for a trillion-dollar company, but damaging nonetheless. And let’s not forget that sweet, sweet data it would be forgoing.

It wouldn’t be the first instance of Google pulling services from particular markets, and it wouldn’t even be the first time it has done so over this very issue: In 2014 the company shut down Google News in Spain in response to a law forcing aggregators to pay publishers for displaying their content, while France recently dodged a similar threat, with Google forced to negotiate an agreement with French publishers (Google had attempted to avoid payments by no longer displaying snippets in the country but was overruled by the French competition watchdog). But to threaten to remove the search engine entirely is a huge and frankly terrifying call.

What would it mean for Maps and YouTube searches? For Android users? For finding out the capital of Georgia? (Tbilisi, present capital; Kutaisi, historical capital of the Kingdom of Georgia; Atlanta, if you mean the state.) Google currently accounts for 94% of search traffic in Australia, meaning we would have to find alternative tools, and though no one’s quite sure exactly what it would be yet, we’re starting to talk. Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckGo? Google’s own search results showed a 400% increase in people looking for alternatives in the 24 hours following its alarming pop-up.

A file photo of Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. Reuters/Marcos Brindicci/File Photo

There may be more at stake here for Alphabet (Google’s parent company) than 4.8 billion dollarydoos. It’s believed Google is going so hard against Australia’s code to avoid setting a global precedent while many governments are looking at models for enforcing payments for news, Australia’s proposal goes further than most in forcing Google to pay for links to news sites, not just for previews or snippets.

Also read: Why Everyone Should Be Concerned About Parler Being Booted From the Internet

Google is making an example of Australia in order to head off similar measures elsewhere. On the flip side, leaving the Australian market could create a dangerous precedent too, creating opportunities for another search engine to fill the space. Morrison has already been in talks with leaders at Microsoft, which runs Bing, with treasurer Josh Frydenberg telling the media that Microsoft was “watching this very closely.” If other countries saw Australia successfully walk away from Google and find a suitable alternative, what threat would be left to them?

For now, Australians feel like they’re caught in the middle of an escalating battle between their homepage and their government. This is one serious game of chicken or perhaps it’s simply a game of DuckDuckGo.

This piece was originally published on Future Tense, a partnership between Slate magazine, Arizona State University, and New America.

Watch | Digital and Online Platforms Now Under I&B Ministry: What Does This Mean?

The move, which essentially allows a form of regulation and censorship for both OTT platforms and online news portals, is being received with apprehension.

On November 9, 2020, the government of India issued a notification bringing online and digital platforms under the ambit of the I&B Ministry.

The move, which essentially allows a form of regulation and censorship for both OTT platforms and online news portals, is being received with apprehension.

To add to this, the government has also limited FDI investments for digital media publications to 26% of equity.
This limitation has recently resulted in the shutting of operations for HuffPost India, a US-based media platform reporting in the country.

Media Use of Pictures of Drunk Girls in Alcohol Stories is Misleading

Newspapers depict young women as “the public face of binge drinking” which leads to women being judged more harshly for drunken behaviour than men.

Newspapers depict young women as “the public face of binge drinking” which leads to women being judged more harshly for drunken behaviour than men.

Meet Bench Girl (you’ll have seen her before). Courtesy of The Conversation.

Meet Bench Girl (you’ll have seen her before). Courtesy of The Conversation.

When the English artist William Hogarth produced his infamous engravings of prosperous ‘Beer Street’ and chaotic ‘Gin Lane’ in the mid-18th century, it reflected efforts to control London’s supposed gin crisis. Gin consumption had risen from very little at the beginning of the century to 19 million gallons per year by the 1750s, and many people had become alarmed.

One of the most striking images of ‘Gin Lane’ is a partially undressed woman smiling as she carelessly drops a small child onto the street far below. Men are depicted as engaged in acts of violence or slumping helplessly after losing their jobs from drinking too much gin.

Gin Lane. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Gin Lane. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Over 250 years later, the media still portrays the drinking behaviour of women and men very differently. We encountered this first hand a few years ago when we published research on gender differences in alcohol-related deaths in Scotland.

The press release clearly stated that over twice as many men died from alcohol misuse every year as women. Yet the newspaper coverage included headlines such as ‘New booze death map shame of Scottish women’, accompanied by images of slumped women clutching wine glasses.

Bench girl’ to blame

We see this kind of thing again and again in the media – so don’t be surprised if the New Year coverage conforms to type. Perhaps one of the most reproduced images in UK newspapers for virtually any story about alcohol consumption is “bench girl”, a photograph of a young woman in a short black dress sprawled semi-conscious on a street bench.

We decided to conduct a large study to see how differently men and women’s binge drinking is portrayed in the media as a whole. From a search of seven widely read UK national newspapers and bbc.co.uk, we identified 308 articles about binge drinking published over two years. When we analysed them, we found what we suspected: news articles associate binge drinking with women more frequently than men and present women’s drinking as more problematic.

Just like Hogarth, men are more frequently represented as violent or disorderly while women are characterised as out of control, unfeminine, under-dressed and undignified. News articles tend to present men’s drunken aggression as a danger to others, while women are characterised as putting themselves at risk.

We found a strong emphasis on the deterioration of women’s physical appearance and attractiveness due to alcohol. Terms such as “ravaged”, “ruined” and “haggard” are used to describe the physical effect of alcohol on women, while “scantily clad”, “half-naked” and “nearly baring all” describe their clothing. The few articles which mention men’s lack of clothing link this to loutish behaviour. They don’t suggest a lack of masculinity to parallel their depiction of women, nor do they take the same moralistic tone.

Who’s out of control?. Credit: Pra Chid/The Conversation

Who’s out of control?. Credit: Pra Chid/The Conversation

Acts of distortion

Researchers have previously said that newspapers depict young women as “the public face of binge drinking”, and our research certainly backs this up. Yet the evidence suggests something quite different.

The most recent figures for England showed that 19% of men reported drinking over eight units of alcohol on at least one day in the last week compared to 12% of women drinking over six units (these are the common measures for binge drinking). Men are also more likely to drink than women, more likely to drink heavily, more likely to drink more often and more likely to die from alcohol-related causes. While it is true that the gender gap in alcohol consumption is narrowing both in the UK and elsewhere, one side is still way out in front.

Here’s the problem. Credit: Miceking/ The Conversation

Here’s the problem. Credit: Miceking/ The Conversation

By distorting the truth, people might think binge drinking is primarily about young women and mainly threatens your appearance and not your long-term health. This may encourage men and older people in particular to think of themselves as responsible drinkers who don’t need to question their own drinking.

Articles and images of drunk young women may reinforce gender stereotypes which should be challenged – the double standards that allow women to be more harshly judged for drunken behaviour than men, for example,  and sexual assault victims being seen as ‘asking for it’ if they were drunk at the time.

Finally, alcohol is more freely available, more affordable and more heavily marketed in many countries today than it has been for decades. The best evidence suggests that to reduce alcohol-related harm, people in charge of policy should reduce its availability, increase the price and control the marketing.

If the media continually focuses on a particular group in particular contexts like public places in city centres, we may lose sight of these structural drivers of alcohol harm. If we want to get to grips with our drinking problem, a 1750s-style moral panic is not the way to go about it.

The Conversation

Carol Emslie, Reader / Lead Substance use & misuse research group, Institute for Applied Health Research, Glasgow Caledonian University; Chris Patterson, Research Assistant at the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, and Shona Hilton, Deputy Director of the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Why the History of News Explains Its Future

Change, not stability, has been the steady state of news over the long arc of history.

Change, not stability, has been the steady state of news over the long arc of history.

Newspaper stand in London. Credit: The Conversation/Yukiko Matsuoka, CC BY-SA

Newspaper stand in London. Credit: The Conversation/Yukiko Matsuoka, CC BY-SA

Was May 2016 the month that faith in print newspapers finally died?

On May 6, The New Day, a tabloid print-only newspaper launched by publisher Trinity Mirror in the UK, shut down. The paper was the first new national daily newspaper in the UK for 30 years. It closed after just nine weeks.

The New Day seemed like a last-ditch attempt to sail a boat of print against the tidal wave of online news.

This is just one episode in the dramatic upheaval taking place in the world of journalism that also has seen the shutting down of once established newspapers as well as the emergence of the “citizen journalist” and the popularity of instant, real-time, unmediated news on digital and social media.

Much of this information is self-promoting, unedited and not fact-checked. The current freewheeling world of news seems like journalistic hell to many in a business where American newsrooms shrank by 40% between 2007 and 2015.

But as our research shows, the decline of print journalism will not be the end of news. Not only does this reassure the two of us about the “crisis in journalism.” Our many years of studying the story of news from the 17th century on make us positive about the future. Change, not stability, has been the steady state of news over the long arc of history.

News isn’t the same as journalism

The root of the present pessimism lies, we believe, in the failure of reporters, editors and scholars to draw a distinction between journalism and news.

Reams have been written, for example, about how journalism needs a 21st-century creed or must adopt values of transparency instead of objectivity.

Journalism is a type of news reporting that has existed for a relatively brief period.

Professional journalism is younger than professional baseball and psychoanalysis. While the term journalism emerged in the early 19th century, it established professional codes, education, and associations only in the early 20th century. The first school of journalism in the US, for example, was established at the University of Missouri in 1908.

News, on the other hand, has been with us for centuries.

News existed before the concepts of fairness and objectivity, before anyone thought a newspaper should have editors and reporters.

John Aubrey (1626-1697).

John Aubrey (1626-1697).

News could be seen in the feature-like personality sketches that John Aubrey wrote for his English friends (and posterity) in the 17th century about such individuals as William Shakespeare and Thomas Hobbes. News could be found under the Tree of Cracow in the 18th century, a chestnut tree in a Parisian garden where people with inside information exchanged newsworthy tidbits. And in Philadelphia printer, Benjamin Franklin gathered news by strolling to the wharf when ships arrived to get the latest mail and overseas newspapers for materials to publish in his Pennsylvania Gazette.

News in the days before industrial steam-powered printing presses and telegraphy was already cosmopolitan. Cities were the hubs of information. Urban dwellers often sought to learn more about other cities than surrounding rural areas. Cities occupy a similarly dominant position in the globalised news of today. Consider this recent data point as reported in the Washington Post:

If you want a reporting job today, your best bet is to move to D.C., L.A. or New York. They were home to almost one in every five reporting jobs in 2014, up from one in eight in 2004. Anywhere else, your journalistic job options are dwindling.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, news often cost nothing because it was produced by amateurs for the amusement of a few. Even “for sale” news was often an afterthought. Franklin’s newspaper was ancillary to his printing business, not by any means his chief activity, although we tend to emphasise it now.

In contrast, today’s dominant understanding of journalism, often called the Anglo-American model, evolved at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. It paralleled the rise of professions and technology changes – such as rotary printing presses – that created high barriers to entry to the newspaper business.

The values that emerged from this system insisted, for example, on separating the commercial side of the newspaper from the news portion.

Many scholars as well as journalists idealistically view these values as providing universal, permanent standards for news, just as Francis Fukuyama’s 1992 “End of History” argued that the end of the Cold War had settled all the big questions about forms of government.

But history – and news – does not work that way. This 20th-century moment of high professionalism is an exception in the history of news, not its defining moment. In important respects it was an aberration. Not least because of the cost.

Anglo-American journalism is expensive

Foreign bureaus and investigative reporting are expensive as are state and national news bureaus, stand-alone Sunday book reviews, and specialised reporting on health, science and business.

At the high point of Anglo-American journalism, when news business coffers brimmed, this was sustainable. Newspapers enjoyed average annual returns of 12%; magazines were nearly as high at 10 percent, as media economist Robert Picard has shown. During that same time, grocery store profits were in the 2% range and department stores around 4%.

The original home of the Oregonian, the oldest continuously published newspaper on the west coast of the US Oregon Native Son.

The original home of the Oregonian, the oldest continuously published newspaper on the west coast of the US Oregon Native Son.

This highly profitable system was made possible by a complex set of subsidies supporting aggressive news-gathering.

Advertisers subsidised American newspapers to reach the mass market of consumers that arose in the late 19th century. By the mid-20th century, advertisements covered about 80% of newspaper operating costs. Readers paid the remaining 20%, which roughly equaled the cost of delivery, so advertisers subsidised readers too.

Readers also subsidised each other. The reader who cared little about hard news paid for the paper to learn sports scores, television listings, and supermarket sales. Expensive news, such as investigative journalism, was paid for by people who very often didn’t read it.

The resulting newspaper, which provided a bit of something for everyone, was relatively cheap and thus attractive to potential consumers.

This was an excellent financial model – as long as technology did not change much. But now it has thanks to the low-cost-of-entry, low-cost-of-production competitors on the Internet.

But new technologies have retrieved old techniques

These challenges have forced changes in the newsroom unimaginable ten years ago.

Then, no New York Times editor would have countenanced advertising that mimicked news, as it would blur the strong line that separated the editorial functions from the rest of the paper. Today, so-called native advertising accounts for 10% of the Times’ digital revenue.

While many of these developments seem earth-shattering, they are not wholly novel.

To give just a few examples, the contemporary news environment is increasingly filled with citizen journalists supplying news for free over platforms ranging from Twitter to the Huffington Post. They operate without editorial supervision as Aubrey did in the 17th century. These individuals, like the unemployed Eliot Higgins, who became the leading expert on munitions in Syria, are unpaid, but their skills and information provide crucial fodder for commercial media companies. They also live a similarly precarious existence to printers in the 18th century, when newspapers would blossom and fold continuously.

As a Briton and an American, we recognise the Anglo-American model’s virtues and believe it will continue. But it is now going to coexist with other models.

New technologies that have disrupted the Anglo-American model have paradoxically retrieved older ways of conveying news.

In our “news” today, we can see the re-emergence of the tattler, the party pamphlet, the recondite journal of opinion, the yellow rag, the journal of commerce, the sob sister, the literary journal, and the progressive muckraker. The amateur citizen journalist, toiling solitarily as Aubrey did, exists side-by-side with the school-trained reporter in a large newsroom.

Both news and journalism are constantly evolving.

The demise of Britain’s New Day might spell the beginning of the end for print-only newspapers. But one thing is certain. Today’s newspapers will not be following in the footsteps of the Dublin Gazette, which in November 1670 stopped printing because “there was no news.”

The ConversationJohn Maxwell Hamilton, Global Scholar at Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, DC and Hopkins P Breazeale Professor, Manship School of Mass Communications , Louisiana State University and Heidi J. S. Tworek, Assistant Professor of International History, University of British Columbia.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.