Google's AP deal passes one-year mark, yields nothing
Licensing deals results in no new products
IDG News Service - One year after Google Inc. acknowledged signing a licensing deal with The Associated Press to launch new Google features and services, the promised offerings haven't been delivered.
The deal attracted a lot of attention when it was announced in August of last year. At the time, Google went to great lengths to make clear that it didn't sign the deal in order to appease the wire news agency and avoid a lawsuit over the use of AP material in the Google News aggregation site.
Google was then defending itself from a lawsuit from another global wire service, Agence France Presse, which alleged that inclusion of its content in Google News amounted to copyright infringement.
Then -- as it does now -- Google argued that Google News is protected by the fair use principle, because it only displays headlines, text snippets and thumbnail images.
As such, Google maintains that it doesn't need permission to crawl news sites, index their content and link to their articles from Google News.
When describing the AP deal a year ago, Google said that it was intended to let Google use original AP content in a broader manner than in Google News for future features and products.
"We are very excited about the innovative new products we will build with full access to this [Associated Press] content," Google said in a statement then. "Google News is fully consistent with fair use and always has been."
However, the licensing deal is now more than a year old. It had been signed a few months before it was announced in August of last year and the promised new Google services and features are nowhere to be seen.
A Google spokesman confirmed yesterday that the AP deal hasn't produced any new offerings yet.
"We are always working on new ways to help users find the information they are looking for, and our business agreement with the Associated Press is one example of that," Google spokesman Gabriel Stricker wrote via e-mail. "We're confident that our relationship with the AP will result in user benefit but have nothing specific to announce at this time."
AP spokesman Jack Stokes declined to discuss details about the Google deal, citing the organization's general policy on publicly discussing customer deals.
"The agreements with commercial markets, such as the one signed with Google, protect our intellectual property and provide supplemental revenue to subsidize our news gathering and other services for members," he wrote via e-mail.
Industry analyst Greg Sterling of Sterling Market Intelligence said it was fair to note that a year has passed since the announcement, but that he would give Google the benefit of the doubt and assume that the promised offerings are in the works.



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