Google will start paying Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. for the use of its journalism in the United States, United Kingdom and Australia, the latest sign of a changing dynamic between publishers and major tech companies.

The three-year, multimillion-dollar deal announced Wednesday follows a monthslong standoff between Google and Australia over the search giant’s refusal to compensate the country’s publishers, including News Corp., for use of their material.

The payments will enable Google to feature premium content from more than 30 News Corp. titles — from The Wall Street Journal in the U.S. to The Times in the U.K. and Sky News in Australia — in Google News Showcase, its dedicated news section.

Google has also struck multimillion-dollar deals with other Australian publishers, including Seven West, Nine Entertainment and Junkee Media.

Jan. 5, 202101:35

Facebook, which has also been locked in a battle with Australia, is expected to announce its own plans for resolving the dispute with News Corp. and other Australian publishers soon, a source familiar with that company’s plans said.

Google’s deals with Australian publishers, which come on the heels of similar deals with French publishers, indicate that the tech giant is finally willing to pay for news content to avoid regulation. 

Whether that is a good thing for the news industry remains to be seen.

Robert Thomson, the chief executive of News Corp., said the deal would have “a positive impact on journalism around the globe as we have firmly established that there should be a premium for premium journalism.” 

However, some media watchdogs are concerned that these deals will only further entrench Google and Facebook’s power and make news publishers more beholden to them.

Don Harrison, the president of news partnerships at Google, noted that News Showcase now has partnerships with over 500 publications around the world and hopes to announce more partnerships soon.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

Women outshine men in NCAA final TV viewership

For the first time, more people watched the NCAA women’s final game…

Neil Sheehan, Reporter Who Obtained the Pentagon Papers, Dies at 84

In The New York Times Book Review in December 1970, he wrote…

Ukraine signals the battle for Bakhmut is far from over after Russia claims victory

Russia may have effectively captured the symbolic prize of Bakhmut, but in…

Agriculture Companies Push Carbon-Capture Farming; Growers Are Skeptical

Markets Executives say programs provide extra cash and offer long-term benefits This…