Is Google AdSense Destroying Hard-Hitting Investigative Journalism?
from the putting-woodward-and-bernstein-out-of-business dept
There have been stories about how Google's AdSense contextual advertising program has helped contribute to the clogging of search engines with useless pages designed only to generate AdSense clicks -- but now some are questioning if AdSense policies are harming journalism. Specifically, Google has always been careful to replace contextual ads with "public service announcements" (the dreaded "PSAs" to AdSense publishers) whenever the contextualizing system believes the content is too racy (evil?) to be associated with Google. However, as Romenesko points out, that means some more hard-hitting journalism pieces may trigger the PSA switch -- thereby killing off plenty of potential revenue. The fear is that reporters (or publishers) will start writing to satisfy Google AdSense, rather than their audience. Of course, that seems short-sighted. Most writers aren't so focused on the specific ads that will show -- and if they are, their content probably suffers for it. By providing consistently good content (even if some of it pulls PSAs), it's likely that a news site will get more overall traffic in the long run for all of its articles.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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PSAs are not the only choice
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PSAs are not the only choice
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Amen! Some people act like Google is controlling everything. They are NOT! It's not like there aren't any other choices.
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Worse
Google really needs to learn that if you put the words crap in the same sentence as product X, you really shouldn't be advertising product X, your not getting a sympathetic audience at that point.
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This isn't new
Why did the fashion and glamour magazines stay silent for nearly 30 years about the dangers of smoking, even as they covered other health and diet issues regularly? Because they didn't want to lose cigarette advertising. Why do newspapers nearly ignore supermarket issues like genetically modified foods and the privacy risks of shopper cards? Because supermarkets are the number one advertiser in most daily papers. These "make money or make readers happy" issues have been around for a while.
Really, though, it comes down to the integrity of the publication. On this page I see Google Adwords ads. Should I be worried that Mike will pick stories to pump up the revenue? I don't see any signs of bias at this point.
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Every once in a while, you miss the story
The EVIL here is a journalist writing a article to make money. Edwin R Murrow would be rotating in his grave at 10,000 RPM. What ever happened to honest journalism? Nowdays the purpose of a network newscast is the make money. It got so profitiable that Ted Turnner made an entire channel out of it (then a brief battle made that channel profitable).
All the other outlets are doing the same - targeting money. They think journalism was born yellow. No, that is a disease and is not normal.
Please, just present the news for news sake, well written and honest. If your employer doesn't want that, please - if you can - find another job.
TechDirt is an opinion site about news, and I think you got it wrong this time.
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Re: Every once in a while, you miss the story
This is how I would write a story:
In Lebanon today 15 Isreali troops...blah, blah, blah...for the time being. Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target Target
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Re: Every once in a while, you miss the story
I personally would rather buy (either via ads I look at, or access I pay for) impartial news. Most people, even though they say not, would rather "buy" news that is biased towards their own point of view. So the majority of news organizations cater towards them.
If you think journalism was ever about "news for news sake" you are delusional. Journalism has always been about selling news for money.
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Re: Every once in a while, you miss the story
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You Tell me Mike
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Incredibly Stupid Analysis
AdSense may avoid ads on controversial topics, but web publishers know this as a fact. PSA ads are OPTIONAL with AdSense, not mandatory or forced. Any publisher can easily generate their own alternate ads if Google won't serve one on that 'controversial' page - if they don't they shouldn't consider themselves an effective online publisher, and it's their fault and choice. If they hold back or write specifically for AdSense ads, the readers will notice it and leave, most likely for good. Less traffic means far less revenue, especially in this long tail age of journalism.
It would cost them more in the long term than any short term gain.
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Re: Worse
See, now you know how hard it is for Google.
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RE: 1984... ridiculuous
Except in China...
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Re: Re: Every once in a while, you miss the story
For example, nothing wrong with a painter making money on his work. However, if they have a concept in mind, then change their concept so that they have a chance of selling the art for more, then I believe they violated ethics. The same with a doctor. As soon as they order extra tests in order to make additional profit, they have violated ethics.
Most or all professions have some sort of ethics associated with them. Some are more serious (politicians, doctors, law enforcement), others get off lighter (I'm a programmer, and I feel my ethics are to develop the best code I can and to report any problems I see). Hopefully everyone can get really rich within these bounds, but once you step outside the bounds you've crossed the line.
So I think a journalist who changes a story (that I assumed they believed in) to increase the value of it or the chance of selling it is crossing that line.
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Re: RE: 1984... ridiculuous
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Journalism in general is NOT an objective source of information. All you need is half a brain to see how "reporting" is completely colored through the eyes of the "journalist." I can't tell the difference between the front page of the NY Times and its editorial page.
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this doesn't strike me as much of a threat to investigative journalism. certainly not enough of one to DESTROY investigative journalism. So what if an article they write on sex shops displays a PSA. What should it have displayed were it not a PSA?
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the bad think about page rankings
SEO, ie designing and supporting a page or site so that the search engines know that it is valuable and known is a fine art. ANd again and again the search engines find the cheaters and take their status, and all theri hard work, away.
--SEO is optimizing your stuff, that's the O--
I learned this from my friends who worked for one of the biggies and jumped ship because he wanted to do a better job than he was allowed to do. You know, geek-taste, to do it really right. That's what you get when you are the boss or branding and seo -http://www.brandseo.com is his splash at setting the kind of ethical climate that YaYC, Jamie and Mike are talking about.
NC on the PSA switch. OK one, remember that users on google usually/often have the 3-way switch set for not-explicit. Half the internet is porn and if I am interested I will flip the switch. Normally the distraction just lowers the signal to noise ration and makes everything take longer. So that covers all of it.
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So that's the plan
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Re: So that's the plan
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Google AdWord and AdSense and their Adavnaced Data
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Google AdWord and AdSense and their Adavnaced Data
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Re: You Tell me Mike
Hell no. We don't care at all.
As the post clearly states, it's stupid to do so. Censoring what you write about for the sake of ads means you have worse content, and that will have a larger impact than the impact on a single story.
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Re: Re: Every once in a while, you miss the story
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What's so bad about PSAs
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Re:
I, for one, welcome our new Anonymous Coward overlords.
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Re:
If no such rules, they need to give answer in the court.
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