Google’s ongoing effort to rehabilitate its reputation with the world of publishing in Europe took another step forward today. The Digital News Initiative, a group formed by the search giant to explore, promote and financially back new efforts in news publishing, announced that it is putting €24 million ($26 million) into 124 projects across 25 countries in Europe. The efforts span major newspapers embarking on projects to advance data journalism and the use of AI to surface stories for readers; through to a non-profit developing ways to weed out fake news, a timely subject in the wake of the recent U.S. election.
More highlights on the projects below, and a detailed run-down can be found here.
This is the second tranche of funding from the DNI, which was launched in 2015 and opened up for applications a year ago. If 124 sounds like a lot of projects, that appears to be the strategy for Google here: fund many people with smaller sums of money. The first group of funded projects, announced earlier this year, numbered 128, which received a total of €30 million.
Google’s efforts to support news organizations big and smal trying out new things comes at the same time that the company is trying to negotiate a path forward in Europe with regulators, who are coming after it with a series of antitrust cases accusing it of being too dominant not just its search business, but its mobile Android business well.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai is currently in Europe and is expected to meet with Margrethe Vestager, the EU antitrust chief, on Friday of this week, to discuss the ongoing cases.
The DNI work also comes at a time when many news organizations are struggling against the economics of the news industry — which has had a messy transition from being a profitable, print-based business that made money on newspaper sales and advertising, to a largely free effort that is available online.
That is a trend that is hurting not just smaller primary-news outfits but some of the most iconic among them. The WSJ and the Guardian are among the larger publications that have announced job cuts in recent months; among some of the newer and more innovative groups, Fusion and Univision have said they will lay off up to 250 staff, with some of that already taking effect. (And that’s before you start to consider smaller blogs.)
Some have laid at least part of the blame for the slow demise of the news industry at Google’s feet (and more recently Facebook’s) because of the way that they aggregate and share headlines and offers its own way to quickly scan the basics of stories without needing to click into publishers’ own sites, making it a challenge to institute subscriptions or paywalls around that content.
Still, others have tried to forge ways of working with these portal behemoths, for example by incorporating Google’s AMP project and Facebook’s Instant Articles to make the experience of viewing articles faster (and giving up some of their traffic in the process).
The DNI sits as a counterbalance to this, with some 180 members from across the industry in Europe. Notably, as part of the financial backing, Google and the DNI do not take any equity stake in the projects or the companies running them.
Ludovic Blecher, the head of Digital News Initiative Innovation Fund at Google, said that the main criteria for this latest tranche of funding included not only “impact, innovation and project feasibility” but also projects focused on collaboration. “The projects that stood out prioritise collaborative approaches between publishers, academics, designers and entrepreneurs, both within a single country and across Europe,” he said. The range of individual funding can go from €50,000 to €300,000 typically, although can be higher in special cases.
Getting even €50,000 from Google is a competitive process. There were 850 submissions for this latest round of funding, and Google said that 43 focus on collaboration. “We see this collaboration–across countries, across newsrooms and across specialties–as an amazing display of the intent to energise the European news ecosystem with new ideas, new technologies and more,” he notes.
We have taken a deeper dive into one of the projects getting funding today from Google, in part because it’s a timely issue: Full Fact, a non-profit out of the UK, will be using the funding not just to continue building out its human team of fact checkers, but also to embark on building some automated fact-checking tools.
Sourse: techcrunch.com