So, about that open letter from Google….

A response to this article has been published by Nulu
https://www.edenmonarovoice.com.au/2020/08/30/a-shockwave-of-inquests/ - edited 1/9/2020

If you went to use Google or YouTube in the last few days, you may have been met with a pop-up, warning that the tech giant’s functionality was “at risk” from new Australian government regulation.

The open letter as seen on Google and youTube home pages

Google Australia’s managing director, Mel Silva, wrote an open letter in response to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) News Media Bargaining Code, which would require Google (and Facebook) to negotiate “fair payment” for Australian news content published on their services.

The letter, pinned to the Google homepage, claims the code would force Google “to provide you with a dramatically worse Google Search and YouTube”. The ACCC has already labelled several of the letter’s statements as “misinformation”.

It seems Google isn’t keen to set a global precedent by paying Australian news outlets for their content. Google claims the ACCC’s proposed code is disastrous, for a variety of reasons.

First, Google is objecting to a specific part of the legislation designed to stop it downranking (or refusing to list) news content if Google has to pay for it.

The ACCC is heading that off at the pass. The legislation states if Google intends to change the search ranking of a news organisation, for example by downranking that outlet’s stories in Google’s search results, it must give the organisation 28 days’ notice of this change.

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The ACCC are saying that the open Letter has several pieces of ‘misinformation’

The open letter claims this is unfair and would help news outlets “artificially inflate their ranking over everyone else”.

When asked how this was this case, a Google spokesperson told The Conversation the code would require the company to “give all news media businesses advance notice of algorithm changes and explain how they can minimise the effects”.

They said this provision would “seriously damage” Google’s products and user experience and impact its ability to provide users the most relevant results.

However, this claim doesn’t bear logical scrutiny. Notifying a news company of its impending downranking would not give it an unfair advantage, as no other types of content providers would be targeted for demotion anyway.

It would simply warn the outlet if Google was about to drop them down in search results, or boot them off altogether. The 28 days’ notice requirement is an insurance policy in case Google retaliates by deciding to simply downrank media outlets demanding payment for content. That’s why Google hates it.

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By Jambo

A lifelong technophile and science fiction geek, Jambo joined the Eden-Monaro Voice in 2020. With interests in science, space travel, and post-humanism, Jambo is always on the hunt for the overlap of science-fact and science-fiction. Jambo is occasionally found taking photos around the East Jindabyne area or holding up a bench in Nugget's with a pie and a coffee in his hands.

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