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我们向加州参议院司法委员会就《加州新闻保护法》提供的证词_AI阅读总结 — 包阅AI

包阅导读总结

1. 关键词:California Journalism Preservation Act、Google、News Partnerships、Local Journalism、Wrong Approach

2. 总结:

– 谷歌全球新闻合作副总裁 Jaffer Zaidi 于 2024 年 6 月 25 日向加州参议院司法委员会陈述。

– 谷歌是世界上最大的新闻支持方之一,支持加州 200 多家新闻机构。

– 认为加州新闻保护法案出发点虽好但方法错误,有破坏性后果。

– 提出自己的提案,希望能作为可行方案的基础。

3. 主要内容:

– 谷歌全球新闻合作副总裁 Jaffer Zaidi 向加州参议院司法委员会陈述

– 谷歌使命是使全球信息可访问和有用

– 搜索每天为包括新闻出版商在内的网站带来数十亿访问量

– 谷歌是新闻的大支持者

– 有新闻展示产品的付费许可计划和谷歌新闻倡议

– 为加州 200 多家新闻组织提供支持

– 对加州新闻保护法案的看法

– 基于错误前提,平台未侵占新闻内容获利

– 违背开放互联网原则,强迫平台付费和展示内容违宪

– 资助对象包括不利本地新闻的利益方,无法阻挡错误信息方获取资金

– 让一两家公司承担全部负担,保护其他大平台

– 提出自己的提案

– 增加贡献,通过针对性计划支持加州本地新闻

– 呼吁广泛利益相关者参与

思维导图:

文章地址:https://blog.google/products/news/our-testimony-to-the-california-senate-judiciary-committee-on-the-california-journalism-preservation-act/

文章来源:blog.google

作者:Jaffer Zaidi

发布时间:2024/6/26 15:05

语言:英文

总字数:559字

预计阅读时间:3分钟

评分:83分

标签:立法,新闻业,谷歌,加州,新闻


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Editor’s Note: Delivered to the California Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, June 25, 2024.

Good afternoon, Chair Umberg, Members of the Committee, and Assemblymember Wicks. Thank you for the opportunity to be here today.

My name is Jaffer Zaidi, and I’m Google’s Global Vice President of News Partnerships.

Since 1998, our mission has been to make the world’s information universally accessible and useful. In service of that mission, every day, Search continues to send billions of visits to publisher websites, and that includes news publishers of all sizes.

Today, we’re also one of the largest supporters of journalism in the world. That includes paid licensing programs through our News Showcase product, and the Google News Initiative, which provides tools, training, and funding programs specifically focused on local, under-represented, and community-based publications. It’s through these programs that we’re proud to support over 200 news organizations in California.

To be clear, the act of surfacing links to news content is not commercially lucrative for Google — as we rarely show any advertising against news searches. We make these investments because connecting our users to information and news about the world around them is core to our mission. And that’s why we share the goal of strengthening local journalism in California.

However, while well intentioned, we strongly believe that the California Journalism Preservation Act takes the wrong approach, and will certainly have damaging consequences.

  • First, it’s built upon the flawed premise that platforms somehow appropriate news content and profit from it without compensating news businesses. That is not the way that Search works. All website owners — including news organizations and publishers — decide whether we are able to link to their site, and what (if anything) can be shown in addition to that.
  • The bill would also break the foundational principles of the open internet, forcing platforms to pay publishers for sending valuable free traffic to them, which they choose to receive. It then compels platforms to show that content — a profoundly unconstitutional and problematic notion.
  • As many others have pointed out, the bill would also heavily fund interests that run counter to supporting actual local journalism here in California. That includes out-of-state private equity firms and hedge funds with histories of stripping newsrooms for parts, as well as global and national conglomerate publishers.
  • It also has no way of blocking misinformation-oriented actors from accessing funding.
  • Meanwhile, it puts the full burden of support on one or two companies — while shielding many large platforms who also link to California news publishers.
  • Frameworks like this have led some platforms to remove links to news publishers altogether in other markets, delivering a devastating blow to smaller publishers in particular.

There needs to be a better path.

We have shared our own proposal that would meaningfully increase our contributions, delivered through targeted programs to ensure support for truly California-based journalism. It also calls on a broad range of stakeholders to contribute — which should be a prerequisite for any solution. We hope this can serve as the basis for a workable path forward, and remain committed to working towards that.

I’d like to close by expressing my deep appreciation to Chair Umberg, Assemblymember Wicks, Senator Glazer and all of you for your efforts to work with and listen to stakeholders.

Thank you for your time, and I look forward to your questions.