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Google,
Facebook are killing journalism - 19th May 2017







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by
ADAM CREIGHTON
High-profile
job losses at Fairfax in recent weeks are part of
a worrying trend. More than 2500 journalists have
been laid off by Australias media companies
since 2011, about a quarter of the total.
Meanwhile,
the ranks of public relations, advertising and corporate
affairs professionals have swollen by around 19,000
to 91,000, according to ABS statistics. That leaves
about 12 PR people for every journalist in the country
and it certainly feels that way when I open
my inbox each morning. These figures exclude the thousands
of political advisers working for state and federal
governments too.
Unless
this army of spinners is entirely useless, such an
onslaught must have compromised the quality of what
journalists write and say, quite apart from their
reduced numbers.
The
free market, it seems, is destroying journalism, or
at least the salaried variety employed by companies
dedicated to producing it. Or is it?
In
any case this is a disaster economic, political
and social in a way the collapse of advertising
would not be.
Journalists
are the only effective check on government and large
corporations, whose information about, and power over,
citizens and customers is probably greater than at
any time in history. Their incentives to call
out vested interests are naturally aligned
with the public interest more than any other job.
Journalism
is suffering because the advertising revenues that
sustained it have been sucked away by digital behemoths
Google and Facebook, which between them are earning
about 85 per cent of all new digital advertising revenue.
These
platforms are attractive to users partly because a
lot of quality content can be found on them
but the producers of that content get nothing. Thanks
for the fame, but it doesnt put food on the
table!
Barely
known a decade ago, Google and Facebook are among
the five largest companies by market capitalisation
in the world together with Microsoft, Amazon
and Apple. Facebooks global revenue has grown
from $272m in 2008 to more than $30bn last year. Googles
from $20bn to more than $90bn over the same period.
These revenues once funded the production of content
journalism, television, etc. Now they dont.
The
astonishing and precipitous decline in revenue paid
to content creators has nothing to do with the idea
that people are listening to less music, reading less
or watching fewer movies and TV shows, says
American author Jonathan Taplin in his important new
book, Move Fast and Break Things, predicting the bloodbath
witnessed in print journalism will hit television
channels in the next five years.
Google
and Facebook have dramatically improved the world
in many ways, improving the quality and speed of communication
while slashing its cost. Its hard to imagine
life without them and that includes journalists
whose productivity has been lifted by search engines.
The
outcomes of the free market are only as good as the
rules government lays down. These rules, insofar as
they relate to copyright, clearly arent doing
enough to ensure the creators of content, such as
journalists, are rewarded for their work. And musicians
too: one million views on YouTube nets the producer
some $US900, explains Taplin. Indeed, since the late
1980s the share of people employed as musicians in
Australia has shrunk by 34 per cent.
Google
and Facebook have been rewarded spectacularly for
their success the formers CEO earned
$US200m last year and very likely will continue
to be.
But
their success is having a detrimental impact on the
production of other goods and services in other industries.
The automobile quite rightly replaced the horse and
cart; it didnt also somehow obliterate the medical
profession. If it had, government would have had to
change the rules.
Unless
they welcome an emaciated media, lawmakers will need
to consider how to change copyright rules to strengthen
the hand of traditional media companies. Maybe the
tech giants should be obliged to pay a small fee to
the owners of the content their applications display?
The
value of Googles search engine and the utility
of your Facebook homepage and the desire for
advertisers to pay to appear! are enhanced
the greater the range of quality content that can
be found there. Currently, the vast bulk of that benefit
is flowing directly to the tech giants.
Media
companies, beset by traditional rivalries and worried
about falling foul of competition laws, have proved
incapable of negotiating as one with the online giants.
They should be able to negotiate like a monopolist
if they are facing one. This should be urgently encouraged.
The
tech giants success isnt only a worry
for journalists. Not since the turn of the 20th
century, when Theodore Roosevelt took on the monopolies
of John Rockefeller and JP Morgan, has this country
faced such a concentration of wealth and power,
Taplin writes. Roosevelts successor Woodrow
Wilson, of a very different political persuasion,
was worried too: If monopoly persists, monopoly
will always sit at the helm of the government.
We arent worried enough about monopolies.
Google
has about 90 per cent of online search market in Australia.
The algorithm that responds to users queries
is wholly private, yet has immense power over what
people buy and think.
Around
half of people use Facebook as their primary source
of news. In combination with their smartphones, the
level of personal, financial and locational information
exceeds anything any government has ever amassed.
(The
Australian)
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