Germany’s Top Publisher Bows to Google in News Licensing Row

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Germany’s biggest news publisher, Axel Springer, has scrapped a bid to block Google from running snippets of articles from its newspapers, saying that the experiment had caused traffic to its sites to plunge.

Springer said a two-week-old experiment to restrict access by Google to its news headlines had caused Web traffic to its publications to plunge, leading it to row back and let Google once again showcase Springer news stories in its search results. Chief Executive Mathias Doepfner said that his company would have “shot ourselves out of the market” if it had continued with its demands for the US firm to pay licensing fees. Springer, which publishes Europe’s top-selling daily newspaper, Bild, said Google’s grip over online audiences was too great to resist, a double-edged compliment meant to ram home the publisher’s criticism of what it calls Google’s monopoly powers.


Germany’s Top Publisher Bows to Google in News Licensing Row German media giant Axel Springer admits defeat, allows Google to index its news stories (GigaOm)