Germany's Top Publisher Admits Its Web Traffic Plummeted Without Google; Wants Politicians To 'Take Action'
from the careful-what-you-wish-for dept
A couple of weeks ago, we wrote about the decision by German publishers to grant Google a "free license" to post snippets -- a humiliating climbdown from their earlier position that Google should pay for the privilege of sending them traffic. Now Germany's leading publisher, Springer, has admitted in a Reuters article that stopping Google from using snippets for a while was catastrophic for its titles:
Springer said a two-week-old experiment to restrict access by Google to its news headlines had caused web traffic to its publications to plunge, leading it to row back and let Google once again showcase Springer news stories in its search results.
The Reuters article provides some interesting figures quantifying the power of Google in Germany:
Chief Executive Mathias Doepfner said on Wednesday that his company would have "shot ourselves out of the market" if it had continued with its demands for the U.S. firm to pay licensing fees.Springer said traffic flowing from clicks on Google search results had fallen by 40 percent and traffic delivered via Google News had plummeted by 80 percent in the past two weeks.
In the same piece, a Google spokesperson provided some other numbers:
He said Google delivers more than half a billion clicks to German news sites per month. The search company has paid more than one billion euros in online advertising fees to German media publishers in the last three years, the spokesman said.
Doepfner said his company's climbdown was
proof of Google's overwhelming power in the search market. He said he hoped lawmakers, courts and competition regulators would take action to curb its powers.
As we wrote recently, there's a risk he may well get his wish, especially in the light of these newly-released figures demonstrating Google's huge power in driving traffic to sites. Given the complete failure of attempts to "curb" Google's powers in Germany, It's hard to see how that will turn out well Europe-wide.
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Filed Under: copyright, germany, snippets
Companies: axel springer, google
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Who are they going to blame next? Yahoo? Bing? Excite?
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They fail to understand
This is a perfect symbiosis. They provide content, Google provides the pathway for people looking for content to THEIR content! And they keep wanting to find some way to screw it up.
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Re: They fail to understand
It's the people that are the power behind Google's search being at the top of the search engine's list.
The people know, trust, use Google more than any other search engine.
These companies need to understand that it's not Google that is in charge, it's the masses.
If they restrict Google from accessing / using their snippets, then the people using Google will never see their snippets, period.
It's incredibly stupid of these companies to beg their law makers to kill their businesses for them.
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Re:
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Re: They fail to understand
No, they don't want to screw it up. They want a larger share of the symbiotic profit. Because Google is good at what it does and marketing it. If they could do better, they would. Their business is ailing because Google's services cause competition at a much larger scale than previously for them.
They can't remove themselves from this larger competition. So they want to get compensation for Google being a driving factor in making their life tougher.
Understandable, but not going to fly.
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If they think that a drop of 40-80% of their traffic is bad, just wait when they lose 100% of their traffic.
Fact is, websites depend on traffic provided by search engines. It's been that way ever since the internet evolved via web browsers.
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Geez.
When Google sends users to my companies site - for free - I'm happy about it.
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Re: Re: They fail to understand
It's the people that drive the numbers.
Google does not control how many people use their search engine.
We, the people, control who gets the lion's share of search requests.
Google doesn't hurt them or anyone else in any way shape or form, unless it's due to some other company's lawsuit or Government derived mis-ruling that forces Google to modify the search results in some fashion or another.
In that case, their problem is caused by their competition, or their Government not Google.
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I don't use Google. Not it's services, not it's search engine. I simply don't like it's terms of service, implied or stated. Nor do I like the idea of when there is a problem you can't get ahold of anyone to straighten it out.
Just because it is free does not mean it is free of problems.
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Re: Re: They fail to understand
I don't understand what this means... it sounds like the argument is that their business is failing because they're operating in a larger market, but I'm pretty sure that's not what you're intending to say.
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Because Google helps generate traffic for other websites, Google should pay to help generate traffic for other websites.
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Re: Re: Re: They fail to understand
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Re:
Well, let's not get too hyperbolic here. They would never lose 100% of their traffic. Lots of people get to web sites through means other than search engine results. 90%, maybe...
On sites that I've run in the past, search engines accounted for between 50-70% of my traffic, depending on the phase of the moon.
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As others have already pointed out, he doesn't understand why Google is able to send the visitors to their websites. The ultimate translation of what this guy is asking for is: "I wish officious EU politicians would force EU citizens to use a different search engine." How do you accomplish this other than banning Google from providing search services in Europe? If you're silly and say that you just want to remove Google's market share, you're really just saying, "I wish there were a way to arbitrarily mandate that a portion of the EU population has to use a different search engine."
I spoken to a number of libertarians who seem to hate Google, but even they should be upset that a government might attempt to interfere with Google's business simply because it's successful. I could understand wanting to go after them if Google were manipulating the news in Germany or causing political corruption through bribery, but their sole "offense" is being good at their business.
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Re: They fail to understand
Damn I guess I've been doing it wrong all this time....
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Re:
Google is obviously designed to search for information, just as Bing et al are obviously designed to search for content.
Information is neutral; the display of content can be...influenced.
This is what makes Google so dangerous to content providers.
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Abolish Google!
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Re:
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Re:
First, you are confusing the Internet and the web. The web is of course that portion of the Internet that's most visible to novice users, and so it's understandable that they conflate the two. But -- as everyone of sufficiently long and deep experience knows -- the web is NOT the Internet and is not even the most important component of the Internet.
Second, while it is true that some web sites depend in part on some traffic generated via some search engines, that is by no means globally true and it is a serious error to presume that it is. Despite the fabrications and lies of so-called "SEO optimization experts" (all of whom are frauds, most of whom are spammers), there are tens of millions of web sites that are doing just fine while receiving very little traffic via search engines. They don't need to. They may not want to. They cater to smaller audiences and as long as those audiences know the requisite URLs, both the operators and the users manage just fine -- and would continue to do even if all search engines ceased to exist.
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Re: Abolish Google!
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Re:
Yahoo has Yahoo!Advertising and Adinterax.
Excite is more or less abandoned by their owner and malware distributor extraordinaire Ask.com.
If you want someone they should try to blame it would be DuckDuckGo, Deeperweb and Seeks. Search engines simultaneously running advertising companies are bad for the image of the industry, since advertising is a dirty business.
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Re: Geez.
Springer has learned through their 'experiment' that Google has gained a very powerful bargaining position: it can just about kill a web-based service simply by omitting it from the search results. And if, at some day in the future, Google should start asking payment for that traffic, Springer would be unable to refuse...
Springer finally realizes that Google (almost) has a monopoly position: the monopoly of directing seekers of information to information sources.
And it's that monopoly they are now afraid of. That is why they ask the politicians to "curb Google's power".
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Re: Re: Abolish Google!
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Re: Re:
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Re: Geez.
But think how much happier you would be if Google paid you, and was required to pay you, for sending users to your site and making you happy.
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Re:
Unfortunately, lots of people think monopoly is inherently bad. It's not. There've been plenty of natural monopolies that got that way and stayed that way simply by doing a great job, or at least a better job than their competitors in the eyes of their patrons.
Google has done a great job at marketing making them synonymous with search. "To Google" has become a generic term, even making it into recent SciFi novels I've read. It annoys me a bit, but I don't resent it. More power to them.
Doepner is cringing from shadows assigning evil due to his personal ignorance. I can't see why anyone complains about them. You don't like them, don't use them. Smiple [sic].
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Re:
They are not libertarians. Don't believe everything you hear.
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Re: Re: Re: They fail to understand
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They are big so they must be evil!
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Re: Re: Re: Abolish Google!
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Re:
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How come they get a free pass to sue whoever they don't like, eh?
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Re: Re: Geez.
They see Google making money, and one aspect of that is showing text that Springer wrote. They believe they own words, and are entitled to get paid because Google is making money.
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Re: Re: Geez.
Because I'd be terrified that if they had to pay, they might stop.
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Re: Re: Re: Geez.
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Re:
No, Google is not abusing its search engine king position to any legally significant degree.
What this guy is asking for is abolishing reasonably effortless search engines altogether. Where is the point in being an established player when people don't get their information by looking for your name but by looking for their information?
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Re: Re: Re: Geez.
I personally don't give a damn about Springer, and I think Google was in the right. But, you know....this could also be viewed as a case where the German legislature tried to regulate how a transnational corporation treated with a domestic industry. It turns out that those regulations were unenforceable, and I'm not particularly comfortable with that.
One of the big problems with TPP is the part that sets up "investor-state dispute settlement" clauses and lets companies place themselves above national laws. I'm not a huge fan of that concept, even when (as in this case) the national laws are stupid laws and the company isn't obviously doing anything wrong. When corporate policy can override national law, you've got a problem.
It's easy to smirk at Axel Springer, just because they were obviously acting from false entitlement and they got smacked down hard. But that smack-down was all about power. If the same scenario played out with local farmers' unions in the place of Springer and Monsanto instead of Google, I doubt many people would be cheering. It's important not to let schadenfreude get in the way of seeing the power dynamics behind this.
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Re: Re: Geez.
It's essential for news sites to be indexed, but it's also essential for google to provide meaningful results for people who use it, or they'll look for a more relevant search engine.
It's a two way symbiotic relation, and so far only one side tried to abuse it (and failed miserably).
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Geez.
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Re:
If the search engine is good at pointing out the best information source, it will render their brand name as an information source worthless.
If the search engine is bad at pointing out the best information source, people will not use it.
As long as anybody is free to create a search engine, it is likely that the best search engine will be preferred by people, rendering the publishers' brand value moot.
The only viable solution is to prohibit news search engines altogether or make it infeasible to operate them.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Geez.
Unless Monsanto was a major provider of distribution of their products, there's no parallel.
The POINT of Monsanto is to lock farmers into licensing agreements for ever and ever and ever... Google doesn't do this.
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Re: Re:
"The only viable solution is to prohibit news search engines altogether or make it infeasible to operate them."
This is silly. The only viable solution is for people to remove their heads from up their asses.
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Re: They are profitable so they must be evil!
IBM is big too.
What they care about is that Google is making money like crazy, and they wish they had some of it. So they whine that Google isn't paying them to drive customers to their site.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: They fail to understand
Even if you have a smaller percentage of larger market than you had of the smaller market (which is likely), you're still making more money.
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Re: Re: They are profitable so they must be evil!
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Re: Re:
If Google is "dangerous", then why would the content providers want to be listed on it?
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Re: Re: Abolish Google!
(Just as point of interest, this RFC was actually successfully implemented, sending 9 packets with a 55% packet loss and a latency varying from approximately 3,000,000ms to 6,000,000ms.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Geez.
Then they don't offer their service in your country.
Obvious, isn't it, boy?
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German publishers are nuts
Yeah.....great idea!
The German publishers are nuts.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Geez.
What does this actually mean on the internet? I run several servers and services that are accessible across the net, but they are intended to be used by myself and a small handful of associates. Nonetheless, anyone in the world can use them. Does that count as "offering" those services globally?
If so, what would be required to avoid that designation?
For example, it seems to me that logically speaking, if Google stopped engaging in commerce with anyone in Germany (no offices, cash no checks, etc.) and didn't change a single other thing that should qualify as not "offering" their services in Germany -- but it would not cause any operation change to how they run their news site at all.
The end result would be pretty much the same as what the situation is now: the news page would be the same, and no German publishers would get a dime more than they get anyway.
When it comes to web sites, I don't really see how the notion of "offering your services" to specific nations is actually meaningful.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: They fail to understand
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Geez.
But it is a possible future. That's what Springer has realized and is now afraid of!
Just because they made a blunder with their little experiment doesn't mean they can't learn...
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Give USG a helping hand.
And if your country exits that service and then later wants it back, it'll cost you dearly in re-start-up fees and ad costs.
I'll bet it'll turn out to be a far better way to foment massive civil unrest in foreign countries than anything the CIA can cook up.
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Re: Give USG a helping hand.
It'll also cost a lot of individual Germans and German businesses dearly to be cut off from Google's services. Think, "Your cloud storage provider just went tits up." It would cause *a lot* of disruption considering G.'s popularity.
If your motto is "Don't be evil", I wouldn't want to go there, even if it's dickheads who're causing it and not G.
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Re: Re: Give USG a helping hand.
Perhaps, but then again, I've never been one to put a lot of faith in a Corporation's Public Relations Slogans, advertisements or Mottos.
A corporation has but one purpose, regardless of its product or service, or its motto. That purpose is simply to take in more money this year than last year, and absolutely every single action a corporation takes, is designed to insure that this goal is reached.
That little graph chart that depicts a company's profits year by year is the true pulse of any corporation and must always rise to new heights each year.
Eternal Sustainable Growth is not really possible, but is nonetheless, the singular goal of all corporations.
"Don't be Evil", instills no more faith than does "A Family Company", or any other corporate motto, as it is designed to make the company look good, nothing more.
All that aside....
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"Think, "Your cloud storage provider just went tits up." It would cause *a lot* of disruption considering G.'s popularity."
I would think that the first country to "opt out" of Google, would provide the best possible advertisement conceivable, and insure Google's acceptance by every other country/government on earth, specifically because of the losses incurred almost immediately by the businesses in that first country, caused solely by its government.
And since with a little penalty pay added to the cost, country A could quickly Opt back in as soon as its government realized the damage it had done, very little real "evil" would be done.
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