Update to our open letter to Australians
On August 17, we wrote an open letter to let you know about new Government regulation that would hurt how Australians use Search and YouTube.
We wanted you to know that the law that’s being proposed — the News Media Bargaining Code — puts the Google services you rely on at risk.
Over the past few weeks, we’ve been really clear that we do not oppose a code of conduct governing the relationship between news media and digital platforms like Google. We want to see a strong future for Australian media. We’ve already agreed to pay a number of publishers to license their content for a new product, including some in Australia, as well as helping train thousands of Australian journalists. It’s part of our bigger commitment to the Australian economy, including working with over a million businesses of all sizes, helping support almost 100,000 jobs, sharing revenues through the YouTube Partner Program, and paying tens of millions of dollars in tax in accordance with Australian Law.
We’ve also corrected some claims that are just wrong. Google doesn’t ‘use’ or ‘steal’ news content (we just link you to what you’re looking for, including news), and we’ve shared research showing that the fall in newspaper revenue over recent years was mainly the result of the loss of classified ads to online classifieds businesses.
Getting to a workable code
We want to see a News Media Bargaining Code that works for everyone involved, and most importantly for you and the millions of other Australians who rely on services such as Search and YouTube. We’re working with the Government and the regulator to find a way through, and address some of the problems with the law as it stands now.
With some reasonable changes, we believe the law’s proposals could be made more fair and workable:
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The current draft law would force us to give news publishers advance notice of significant changes to Search and other products and tell them how to minimise the effect on them. If you have a blog, YouTube channel or a small business website that appears in Search results, you’ll be at a disadvantage compared to these news businesses. And if you use Search to find information, you’ll be worse off because this rule will force us to slow down upgrades that improve Search for everyone.
This requirement of the draft law could be amended to require only reasonable notice about significant actionable changes. -
We know how important it is that your data is safe. The current draft law would require us to tell news businesses “how they can gain access” to data about how you use Google services, without any guarantees about the ways that any data that is provided might be used.
This could be amended to make it clear that Google is not required to share any additional data, over and above what publishers are already supplied—protecting information about how Australians interact with our sites. -
To be able to do what’s best for you when this code becomes law, we need to be able to negotiate fairly with publishers. But the current draft law imposes a one-sided approach to negotiations, allowing news businesses to make claims about the value they say they offer Google, while ignoring the more than $200 million in value that Google provides to publishers each year by sending people to their websites.
This could be amended to take account of the value both sides bring to the table, as the ACCC itself suggested in May, and prevent news businesses getting even more special treatment at the expense of other Australians.
These adjustments, among others, are necessary so you can continue to have full and fair access to Google Search and YouTube.
We’re proposing changes to the draft law to enable us to get to a workable code, so we can all move on to building a strong digital economy for Australia’s future. We’ll keep doing everything we can to make sure the final version of the law is better and fairer -- that it works for you, and for Australia.
Thank you,
Mel Silva
Managing Director, Google Australia