Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers

At a time when the news industry is struggling to cope with the dominance of the advertising market by large platforms, along with recent crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, commercial deals and regulatory initiatives are becoming increasingly common. While there is ample space for regulatory int...

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Main Authors: Charis Papaevangelou, Nikos Smyrnaios
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2023-06-01
Series:Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
Subjects:
Online Access:https://analisi.cat/article/view/3546
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author Charis Papaevangelou
Nikos Smyrnaios
author_facet Charis Papaevangelou
Nikos Smyrnaios
author_sort Charis Papaevangelou
collection DOAJ
description At a time when the news industry is struggling to cope with the dominance of the advertising market by large platforms, along with recent crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, commercial deals and regulatory initiatives are becoming increasingly common. While there is ample space for regulatory interventions seeking to level the playing field between news industry stakeholders and platforms, we are concerned these might further cement the dependency of the former on the latter through co-regulatory frameworks that epitomize the capture of vital infrastructures by platforms. This article examines the three-year negotiation of French news publishers with Google and Meta, which concluded with four framework agreements being signed. For our analysis, we first look at the historical trajectory of how these deals were made possible, using secondary sources such as leaks, press releases and the French Competition Authority’s rulings; we then discuss their details and implications. We trace Google’s attempt to capture news media in France and discuss the asymmetrical power it has exercised over the news industry, and how the subsequent deals with Meta were affected. Finally, our case study shows that these frameworks are not sufficient to tackle systemic imbalances – despite their good intentions – because they fail to challenge the concentration of power by a handful of oligopolistic private companies and, thus, effectively leave it up to them and the free market’s idiosyncrasies to decide how they are implemented.
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spelling doaj.art-fabd2e1477db403d914e4c9a8e0dc9682023-07-16T12:46:26ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaAnàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura0211-21752340-52362023-06-016810.5565/rev/analisi.3546Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishersCharis Papaevangelou0Nikos Smyrnaios1Université de Toulouse Université de Toulouse At a time when the news industry is struggling to cope with the dominance of the advertising market by large platforms, along with recent crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, commercial deals and regulatory initiatives are becoming increasingly common. While there is ample space for regulatory interventions seeking to level the playing field between news industry stakeholders and platforms, we are concerned these might further cement the dependency of the former on the latter through co-regulatory frameworks that epitomize the capture of vital infrastructures by platforms. This article examines the three-year negotiation of French news publishers with Google and Meta, which concluded with four framework agreements being signed. For our analysis, we first look at the historical trajectory of how these deals were made possible, using secondary sources such as leaks, press releases and the French Competition Authority’s rulings; we then discuss their details and implications. We trace Google’s attempt to capture news media in France and discuss the asymmetrical power it has exercised over the news industry, and how the subsequent deals with Meta were affected. Finally, our case study shows that these frameworks are not sufficient to tackle systemic imbalances – despite their good intentions – because they fail to challenge the concentration of power by a handful of oligopolistic private companies and, thus, effectively leave it up to them and the free market’s idiosyncrasies to decide how they are implemented. https://analisi.cat/article/view/3546platformizationcopyrightrelated rightsGoogle NewsFacebook NewsMeta Journalism Project
spellingShingle Charis Papaevangelou
Nikos Smyrnaios
Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
platformization
copyright
related rights
Google News
Facebook News
Meta Journalism Project
title Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
title_full Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
title_fullStr Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
title_full_unstemmed Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
title_short Regulating dependency: The political stakes of online platforms’ deals with French publishers
title_sort regulating dependency the political stakes of online platforms deals with french publishers
topic platformization
copyright
related rights
Google News
Facebook News
Meta Journalism Project
url https://analisi.cat/article/view/3546
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