The impetus for the discussions came from News Corp, owner of newspapers
ranging from the Wall Street Journal of the US to The Sun of the UK, said a
person familiar with the situation, who warned that talks were at an early
stage.
However, the Financial Times has learnt that Microsoft has also approached
other big online publishers to persuade them to remove their sites from
Google’s search engine.
News Corp and Microsoft, which owns the rival Bing search engine, declined to
comment.
Assault on Google
One website publisher approached by Microsoft said that the plan “puts
enormous value on content if search engines are prepared to pay us to index
with them”.
Microsoft’s interest is being interpreted as a direct assault on Google
because it puts pressure on the search engine to start paying for content.
“This is all about Microsoft hurting Google’s margins,” said the web publisher
who is familiar with the plan.
But the biggest beneficiary of the tussle could be the newspaper industry,
which has yet to construct a reliable online business model that adequately
replaces declining print and advertising revenues.
In a possible sign of negotiations to come, Google last week played down the
importance of newspaper content.
Matt Brittin, Google’s UK director, told a Society of Editors conference that
Google did not need news content to survive. “Economically it’s not a big
part of how we generate revenue,” he said.
Online payment models
News Corp has been exploring online payment models for its newspapers and has
taken an increasingly hard line against Google.
Rupert Murdoch, News Corp chairman, has said that he would use legal methods
to prevent Google “stealing stories” published in his papers.
Microsoft is desperate to catch Google in search and, after five years and
hundreds of millions of dollars of losses, Bing, launched in June, marks its
most ambitious attempt yet.
Bing and Google
Steve Ballmer, chief executive of Microsoft, has said that the company is
prepared to spend heavily for many years to make Bing a serious rival to
Google.
Microsoft has sought to differentiate Bing by drawing in material not found
elsewhere, though has not demanded exclusivity from content partners. Bing
accounted for 9.9 per cent of searches in the US in October, up from 8.4 per
cent at its launch, according to ComScore.
James Murdoch, chairman and chief executive of News Corp Europe and Asia,
hinted last week that the company was making progress with its online plans.
“We think that there’s a very exciting marketplace, potentially a wholesale
market place for digital journalism that we’ll be developing,” he said
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