Showing posts with label Google News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google News. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Google launches ‘journalism relief fund,’ following Facebook


Google said Wednesday it will launch an emergency fund to help local news outlets struggling to maintain operations in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

The internet giant gave no specific figure for its fund, but said it would offer grants ranging from the “low thousands of dollars” for the smallest operations to “low tens of thousands for larger newsrooms.”


The move comes with the media sector facing deep cutbacks resulting from the global consumer lockdown, an intense economic slump and a retrenchment in advertising revenues that many news outlets depend on.

“Local news is a vital resource for keeping people and communities connected in the best of times,” Google News vice president Richard Gingras said in a statement. “Today, it plays an even greater function in reporting on local lockdowns or shelter at home orders, school and park closures, and data about how COVID-19 is affecting daily life.”

Gingras said the fund will open to outlets “producing original news for local communities during this time of crisis,” with applications due by April 29.

“At the end of the process, we’ll announce who has received funding and how publishers are spending the money,” he said. “We believe it is important to do what we can to alleviate the financial pressures on newsrooms, and will continue to look at other ways to help with more to announce soon.”


The New York Times has estimated that news outlets have cut 28,000 jobs as a result of the health crisis and subsequent economic impact. Other outlets have furloughed journalists or announced pay cuts.

Facebook on March 30 said it was donating $100 million to support news organizations globally hurting from the coronavirus pandemic. This includes $25 million in grants and ramped up ad spending by the social media giant.

In recent months Facebook and Google have stepped up efforts to help news organizations, following criticism that their dominance of online advertising has made it difficult for media to profit from digital operations.

Agence France-Presse 

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Google expands speedy news page program


WASHINGTON — Google announced Wednesday an expansion of its program which delivers sped-up versions of news stories to smartphones and other devices.

The Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) project, which aims to make Google a key hub for news and challenge rivals like Facebook and Twitter, was implemented in mobile search results earlier this year.

On Wednesday, the program came to all Google platforms including its Google News apps for Apple and Android devices.

“In the few months since AMP launched, thousands of publishers have embraced this new format and are regularly publishing AMP-versions of their content,” said Maricia Scott, engineering director of Google News, in a blog post.

Like Facebook’s “Instant Articles,” the Google project aims to bring a better experience to news readers by loading mobile pages faster than most news websites.

“Our tests have shown that AMP documents load an average of four times faster and use 10 times less data than the equivalent non-AMPed result,” Scott said.

“In many cases these stories will load instantly. That adds up to a win for publishers and users.”

The Google apps will show a “carousel” of key headlines and stories of the day, with the AMP articles labeled with a bolt icon.

“That way, users can know these will be fast even before they click,” Scott said.

Partners with Google AMP include hundreds of news organizations in the United States and around the world.

“Today’s news is a sign that publishers may want to adopt AMP if they want a greater share of the referral traffic from Google News,” said Benjamin Mullin of the Poynter Institute.

“Although Google includes non-AMP enabled websites and articles in its results, the web giant has publicly stated that loading speed is a factor in determining which stories surface higher on the page.”

source: technology.inquirer.net