January 9, 2010 11:38 PM
- Text
Standoff: No New AP Stories Appear on Google News
(MoneyWatch) (Update: A spokesperson for the AP has declined to comment on this BNET report.)
In a confrontation that has been building for months, negotiations between the Associated Press and Google over licensing fees for hosting the AP's content on Google News appear to have broken down.
That is the logical conclusion since Google News has not added any new AP content since December 24, as first reported tonight by Danny Sullivan on his Search Engine Land blog.
Sullivan received the following statement from Google:
"We have a licensing agreement with the Associated Press that permits us to host its content on Google properties such as Google News. Some of that content is still available today. At the moment we're not adding new hosted content from the AP."
Since Google's current licensing deal with AP ends in late January, and allows for stories to only be hosted for the first 30 days after they are published, it would appear that Google is acting to protect itself in the event the negotiations do not yield a new deal.
AP executives have been outspoken over the past year about protecting their content from online aggregators like Google News, which they accuse of undermining the wire service's viability as an ongoing business.
Besides paying for the AP's content blurbs, Google News is a major driver of traffic to the AP and its member newspapers, so the current haitus in their relationship is no doubt reducing the audience to such news stories dramatically.
In a confrontation that has been building for months, negotiations between the Associated Press and Google over licensing fees for hosting the AP's content on Google News appear to have broken down.
That is the logical conclusion since Google News has not added any new AP content since December 24, as first reported tonight by Danny Sullivan on his Search Engine Land blog.
Sullivan received the following statement from Google:
"We have a licensing agreement with the Associated Press that permits us to host its content on Google properties such as Google News. Some of that content is still available today. At the moment we're not adding new hosted content from the AP."
Since Google's current licensing deal with AP ends in late January, and allows for stories to only be hosted for the first 30 days after they are published, it would appear that Google is acting to protect itself in the event the negotiations do not yield a new deal.
AP executives have been outspoken over the past year about protecting their content from online aggregators like Google News, which they accuse of undermining the wire service's viability as an ongoing business.
Besides paying for the AP's content blurbs, Google News is a major driver of traffic to the AP and its member newspapers, so the current haitus in their relationship is no doubt reducing the audience to such news stories dramatically.
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- EU: Greece must cut deeper to get bailout
- Big banks, gov't officials strike $25B deal
- LinkedIn swings back to profit
- LinkedIn doubles revenue, beats growth estimates
- Kodak to stop making digital cameras, frames
- Market cap, schmarket cap, Apple still gets no respect
- Philip Morris Int'l income up nearly 8 percent
- Survey: Small biz plans big hires in 2012
- Freddie Mac: Mortgages inch higher but stay low
- Will the European debt crisis sink Obama's re-election?
- Banks in $25B deal to settle foreclosure abuses
- Joe Coffee: Scaling up without selling your soul
- Greek agreement accomplishes nothing
- 401K plans: New rules make costs clearer
- Are women leaders selling themselves short?
- Ask the Experts: New 401(k) rules
- Mortgage lenders strike a deal
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- 2nd deposition sought for convicted Ponzi schemer
- GM gets environmental OK for new China plant
- German Parliament likely to vote on Greece Feb. 27
- France's Total gets oil price profit boost
on Facebook
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
- "Person to Person" with George Clooney
on CBS News






