tech Archives - News/Media Alliance https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/tag/tech/ Wed, 29 Nov 2023 17:57:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 Canadian News Publishers Reach Deal with Google for Payment for News https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-canadian-news-publishers-reach-deal-with-google-for-payment-for-news/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-canadian-news-publishers-reach-deal-with-google-for-payment-for-news/#respond Wed, 29 Nov 2023 17:57:04 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=14453 The News/Media Alliance applauds the Canadian government for today’s deal with Google for its payment for the use of valuable news content on its Search platform.

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Arlington, VA – The News/Media Alliance applauds the Canadian government for today’s deal with Google for its payment for the use of valuable news content on its Search platform. The amount negotiated is reported to be $100 million per year, down from the $172 million called for by the Canadian government.

The Canadian government passed legislation (C-18, the Online News Act) earlier this year that requires Big Tech platforms such as Google and Meta to pay news publishers for the use of their content. The Online News Act is due to take effect in December.

“This is a very big win for Canadian news publishers and shows that Google will commit to paying fair market value for quality journalism,” stated News/Media Alliance President & CEO Danielle Coffey. “This proves, yet again, that legislation is the only path to sustained right to payment for the fair market value of our quality content. The U.S. must stand up for our vibrant journalism industry and not fall behind other countries. Big Tech cannot continue to harm local news. Congress must protect our democracy and our constitutional right to a free press by implementing legislation that will help sustain quality journalism in America.”

Canada is the latest in a string of countries around the world that have recognized the need to protect quality journalism and passed legislation requiring the tech platforms to pay news publishers for use of their content, including Australia, the United Kingdom, and the European Union.

The Canada bill and today’s deal build momentum for the California Journalism Preservation Act (CJPA – AB 886, introduced earlier this year by California Assemblymember Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland)) – the goal of which will be discussed at an informational hearing next week – and the federal Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) (S.1094, reintroduced in March by Senators Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) and John N. Kennedy (R-LA)) in the U.S. The Senate Judiciary Committee voted favorably in June for the JCPA, which would allow digital journalism providers to collectively negotiate with Google and Facebook for fair compensation for use of their valuable content.

The JCPA has broad support, not only in Congress in both the House and the Senate, but also from over 300 consumer interest groups, unions, conservatives, advocacy groups and third-party organizations that have sent letters of support for the JCPA to the bill sponsors.

The tech platforms are the dominant distributors of news content, reaping tremendous financial benefit without compensation to those who create the content. They also capture the majority of U.S. digital ad revenue, leaving local publishers with little to reinvest in the production of high-quality journalism.

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The News/Media Alliance is a nonprofit organization representing more than 2,200 news and magazine media organizations and their multiplatform businesses in the United States and globally. Alliance members include print and digital publishers of original journalism. Headquartered just outside Washington, D.C., the association focuses on ensuring the future of journalism through communication, research, advocacy, and innovation. Information about the News/Media Alliance can be found at www.newsmediaalliance.org.

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Global Principles on Artificial Intelligence (AI) https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/global-principles-on-artificial-intelligence-ai/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/global-principles-on-artificial-intelligence-ai/#respond Wed, 06 Sep 2023 11:55:17 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=14056 This document sets out principles that the undersigned publisher organisations believe should govern the development, deployment, and regulation of Artificial Intelligence systems and applications.

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Introduction

AI developers and regulators have a unique opportunity to establish an ethical AI framework to boost innovation and create new business opportunities, while ensuring that AI develops in a way that is responsible and sustainable. To achieve this, it is essential that AI systems are trained on content and data which is accessed lawfully, including by appropriate prior authorisations obtained for the use of copyright protected works and other subject matter, and that the content and sources used to train the systems are clearly identified. This document sets out principles that the undersigned publisher organisations believe should govern the development, deployment, and regulation of Artificial Intelligence systems and applications. These principles cover issues related to intellectual property, transparency, accountability, quality and integrity, fairness, safety, design, and sustainable development.

The proliferation of AI Systems, especially Generative Artificial Intelligence (GAI), present a sea change in how we interact with and deploy technology and creative content. While AI technologies will provide substantial benefits to the public, content creators, businesses, and society at large, they also pose risks for the sustainability of the creative industries, the public’s trust in knowledge, journalism, and science, and the health of our democracies.

We, the undersigned organisations, fully embrace the opportunities AI will bring to our sector and call for the responsible development and deployment of AI systems and applications. We strongly believe that these new tools will facilitate innovative breakthroughs when developed in accordance with established principles and laws that protect publishers’ intellectual property (IP), valuable brands, trusted consumer relationships, and investments. The indiscriminate appropriation of our intellectual property by AI systems is unethical, harmful, and an infringement of our protected rights.

Our organisations represent thousands of creative professionals around the world, including news, magazine, and book publishers and the academic publishing industry such as learned societies and university presses. Our members invest considerable time and resources creating high-quality content that keeps our communities informed, entertained, and engaged. These principles – applying to the use of our content to train and deploy AI systems, as they are understood and used today – are aimed at ensuring our continued ability to innovate, create and disseminate such content, while facilitating the responsible development of trustworthy AI systems.

Intellectual Property

1) Developers, operators, and deployers of AI systems must respect intellectual property rights, which protect the rights holders’ investments in original content. These rights include all applicable copyright, ancillary rights, and other legal protections, as well as contractual restrictions or limitations imposed by rightsholders on the access to and use of their content. Therefore, developers, operators, and deployers of AI systems—as well as legislators, regulators, and other parties involved in drafting laws and policies regulating AI—must respect the value of creators’ and owners’ proprietary content in order to protect the livelihoods of creators and rightsholders.

2) Publishers are entitled to negotiate for and receive adequate remuneration for use of their IP. AI system developers, operators, and deployers should not be crawling, ingesting, or using our proprietary creative content without express authorisation. Use of intellectual property by AI systems for training, surfacing, or synthesising is usually expressly prohibited in online terms and conditions of the rightsholders, and not covered by pre-existing licensing agreements. Where developers have been permitted to crawl content for one purpose (for example, indexing for search), they must seek express authorisation for use of the IP for other purposes, such as inclusion within LLMs. These agreements should also account for harms that AI systems may cause, or have already caused, to creators, owners, and the public.

3) Copyright and ancillary rights protect content creators and owners from the unlicensed use of their content. Like all other uses of protected works, use of protected works in AI systems is subject to compliance with the relevant laws concerning copyrights, ancillary rights, and permissions within protocols. To ensure that access to content for use in AI systems is lawful, including through appropriate licenses and permissions obtained from relevant rightsholders, it is essential that rightsholders are able effectively to enforce their rights, and where applicable, require attribution and remuneration.

4) Existing markets for licensing creators’ and rightsholders’ content should be recognised. Valuing publishers’ legitimate IP interests need not impede AI innovation because frameworks already exist to permit use in return for payment, including through licensing. We encourage efficient licensing models that can facilitate training of trustworthy and high-quality AI systems

Transparency

5) AI systems should provide granular transparency to creators, rightsholders, and users. It is essential that strong regulations are put in place to require developers of AI systems to keep detailed records of publisher works and associated metadata, alongside the legal basis on which they were accessed, and to make this information available to the extent necessary for publishers to enforce their rights where their content is included in training datasets. The obligation to keep accurate records should go back to the start of the AI development to provide a full chain of use regardless of the jurisdiction in which the training or testing may have taken place. Failure to keep detailed records should give rise to a presumption of use of the data in question. When datasets or applications developed by non-profit, research, or educational third parties are used to power commercial AI systems, this must be clearly disclosed so that publishers can enforce their rights. Where developers use AI tools as a component into the process of generating knowledge from knowledge, there should be transparency on the application of these tools, including appropriate and clear accountability and provenance mechanisms, as well as clear attribution where appropriate in accordance with the terms and conditions of the publishers of the original content. Without limiting and subject to paragraphs 6 and 9, AI developers should work with publishers to develop mutually acceptable attribution and navigation standards and formats. Users should also be provided with comprehensible information about how such systems operate to make judgments about system and output quality and trustworthiness.

Accountability

6) Providers and deployers of AI systems should cooperate to ensure accountability for system outputs. AI systems pose risks for competition and public trust in the quality and accuracy of informational and scientific content. This can be compounded by AI systems generating content that improperly attributes false information to publishers. Deployers of AI systems providing informational or scientific content should provide all essential and relevant information to ensure accountability and should not be shielded from liability for their outputs, including through limited liability regimes and safe harbours.

Quality and Integrity

7) Ensuring quality and integrity is fundamental to establishing trust in the application of AI tools and services. These values should be at the heart of the AI lifecycle, from the design and building of algorithms, to inputs used to train AI tools and services, to those used in the  practical application of AI. A fundamental principle of computing is that a process can only be as good or unbiased as the input used to teach the system (rubbish-in-rubbish-out). AI developers and deployers should recognise that publishers are an invaluable part of their supply chain, generating high-quality content for training, and also for surfacing and synthesising. Use of high-quality content upstream will contribute to high-quality outputs for downstream users.

Fairness

8) AI systems should not create, or risk creating, unfair market or competition outcomes. AI systems should be designed, trained, deployed, and used in a way that is compliant with the law, including competition laws and principles. Developers and deployers should also be required to ensure that AI models are not used for anti-competitive purposes. The deployment of AI systems by very large online platforms must not be used to entrench their market power, facilitate abuses of dominance, or exclude rivals from the marketplace. Platforms must adhere to the concept of non-discrimination when it comes to publishers exercising their right to choose how their content is used.

Safety

9) AI systems should be trustworthy. AI systems and models should be designed to promote trusted and reliable sources of information produced according to the same professional standards that apply to publishers and media companies. AI developers and deployers must use best efforts to ensure that AI generated content is accurate, correct and complete. Importantly, AI systems must ensure that original works are not misrepresented. This is necessary to preserve the value and integrity of original works, and to maintain public trust.

10) AI systems should be safe and address privacy risks. AI systems and models in particular should be designed to respect the privacy of users who interact with them. Collection and use of personal data in AI system design, training, and use should be lawful with full disclosure to users in an easily understandable manner. Systems should not reinforce biases or facilitate discrimination.

By Design

11) These principles should be incorporated by design into all AI systems, including general purpose AI systems, foundation models, and GAI systems. They should be significant elements of the design, and not considered as an afterthought or a minor concern to be addressed when convenient or when a third party brings a claim.

Sustainable Development

12) The multi-disciplinary nature of AI systems ideally positions them to address areas of global concern. AI systems bear the promise to benefit all humans, including future generations, but only to the extent they are aligned to human values and operate in accordance with global laws. Long-term funding and other incentives for suppliers of high-quality input data can help to align systems with societal aims and extract the most important, up-to-date, and actionable knowledge.

Endorsing Organizations*

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*Additional organizations to endorse the Principles following publication include: AMI – Asociación de Medios de Información (Spanish News Media Association); APImprensa, the Portuguese Press Editors and Publishers Association; Association of Online Publishers (AOP) (UK); ARI, Asociación de Revistas (Spanish Magazine Media Association); TU – Swedish Media Publishers Association

Full list of organizations signing onto the Global AI Principles:

  • AMI – Colombian News Media Association
  • AMI – Asociación de Medios de Información (Spanish News Media Association)
  • APImprensa, the Portuguese Press Editors and Publishers Association
  • Asociación de Entidades Periodísticas Argentinas (Adepa)
  • Association of Learned & Professional Society Publishers
  • Association of Online Publishers (AOP) (UK)
  • Associação Nacional de Jornais (Brazilian Newspaper Association) (ANJ)
  • Czech Publishers’ Association
  • Danish Media Association
  • Digital Content Next
  • European Magazine Media Association
  • European Newspaper Publishers’ Association
  • European Publishers Council
  • FIPP
  • Grupo de Diarios América
  • Inter American Press Association
  • Korean Association of Newspapers
  • Magyar Lapkiadók Egyesülete (Hungarian Publishers’ Association)
  • NDP Nieuwsmedia
  • News/Media Alliance
  • News Media Association
  • News Media Canada
  • News Media Europe
  • News Media Finland
  • News Publishers’ Association
  • Nihon Shinbun Kyokai (The Japan Newspaper Publishers & Editors Association)
  • Professional Publishers Association
  • ARI, Asociación de Revistas (Spanish Magazine Media Association)
  • STM
  • TU – Swedish Media Publishers Association
  • World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA)

Related resources:

Joint G7 letter on development of global AI principles (News/Media Alliance, European Publishers Council, and Digital Content Next)

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News/Media Alliance Applauds Senate Judiciary for Passing Bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-news-media-alliance-applauds-senate-judiciary-for-passing-bipartisan-journalism-competition-and-preservation-act-jcpa/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-news-media-alliance-applauds-senate-judiciary-for-passing-bipartisan-journalism-competition-and-preservation-act-jcpa/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2023 15:27:13 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13831 The Senate Judiciary Committee has favorably voted 14-7 for the bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) (S. 1094), which would allow digital journalism providers to collectively negotiate with Google and Facebook for fair compensation for use of their valuable content.

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Arlington, VA – The Senate Judiciary Committee has favorably voted 14-7 for the bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) (S. 1094), which would allow digital journalism providers to collectively negotiate with Google and Facebook for fair compensation for use of their valuable content. The tech platforms are the dominant distributors of news content, reaping tremendous financial benefit without compensation to those who create the content. They also capture the majority of U.S. digital ad revenue, leaving local publishers with little to reinvest in the production of high-quality journalism.

“For too long, Big Tech has profited from using news content on their platforms, without paying the creators of that content. The JCPA will give small and local publishers a seat at the table and channel critical revenue to them to help sustain the high-quality journalism Americans need and depend on,” said News/Media Alliance President & CEO Danielle Coffey. “We applaud Chairwoman Klobuchar and Senator Kennedy for their enduring commitment to preserving journalism and their ongoing support of the JCPA. We applaud the Senate Judiciary Committee’s passage of this monumental legislation for journalism publishers across our country.”

The JCPA has broad support, not only in Congress in both the House and the Senate (16 co-sponsors in the 118th Congress to date, on both sides of the aisle, with 90 total co-sponsors in the previous Congress), but also from over 300 consumer interest groups, unions, conservatives, advocacy groups and third-party organizations that have sent letters of support for the JCPA to the bill sponsors.

In January, seven leading journalism, media, and pro-consumer antitrust advocacy organizations – including the News/Media Alliance, National Newspaper Association, America’s Newspapers, Authors Guild, American Economic Liberties Project, Inter American Press Association, and the Radio Television Digital News Association – sent a joint letter to President Biden urging him to call on Congress to advance the JCPA. The letter outlines the plight of local news, in which news publishers have been forced to play by Big Tech’s rules of the digital advertising playing field for years, resulting in the loss of more than a quarter of U.S. newspapers since 2005 and the spread of news deserts across the country. In their letter, the groups underscore the importance of passing the JCPA as the best solution to ensuring news publishers are compensated fairly for use of their content by the dominant tech platforms.

In addition, over 24,000 individuals have signed a Change.org petition for the bill and over 1,000 editorials and op-eds in support of the JCPA have been published in newspapers in 48 states across the country. In a poll of 1,000 U.S. adults conducted last spring by Schoen Cooperman Research for the News/Media Alliance, 70 percent of Americans said they support Congress passing the JCPA.

Claims made about the bill by the opposition are unfounded and not supported by the text of the legislation. Under the JCPA, jobs will be created; news outlets will publicly disclose funds received and how it is spent; payment will not be required for links; and platforms will not be forced to carry extreme content. The JCPA will lead to open and vetted compensation for digital journalism outlets for the fair market value the platforms receive. The Myths and Facts around these claims are important to honest and productive discourse.

The Alliance thanks Senator Klobuchar, Senator Kennedy, and all of the co-sponsors of this bill for their leadership in pursuing this legislation and for their commitment to a free press.

The markup proceedings can be viewed here.

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The News/Media Alliance is a nonprofit organization representing more than 2,000 news and magazine media organizations and their multiplatform businesses in the United States and globally. Alliance members include print and digital publishers of original journalism. Headquartered just outside Washington, D.C., the association focuses on ensuring the future of journalism through communication, research, advocacy, and innovation. Information about the News/Media Alliance can be found at www.newsmediaalliance.org.

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Statement: Meta Threatens to Remove News from Meta Platforms if CJPA is Passed https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-meta-threatens-to-remove-news-from-meta-platforms-if-cjpa-is-passed/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-meta-threatens-to-remove-news-from-meta-platforms-if-cjpa-is-passed/#respond Wed, 31 May 2023 20:32:55 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13798 The California Broadcasters Association, California News Publishers Association and News/Media Alliance released a statement in response to Meta's statement today that it would consider removing news from their platform if the California Journalism Preservation Act (CJPA) is passed in California.

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In response to Meta’s statement today that it would consider removing news from their platform if the California Journalism Preservation Act (CJPA) – a bill that would require the dominant tech platforms to fairly compensate news publishers for use of their content – is passed in California, the California Broadcasters Association, California News Publishers Association and News/Media Alliance stated:

Meta’s threat to take down news is undemocratic and unbecoming. We have seen this in their playbook before and they have been publicly admonished in other countries for this behavior, including Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau who criticized Meta’s threats, stating that it showed how “deeply irresponsible and out of touch they are.” As the tech platforms compensate news publishers around the world, it demonstrates there is a demand and economic value for news. These threats were attempted before when the Australian government passed a similar law to compensate news outlets and faced substantial public backlash. The Australian law resulted in countless jobs for local journalists and $140 million to news outlets,  Moreover, stating the CJPA funds would go to “slush funds” is blatantly false. Under the bill, 70 percent of funds must go to journalism jobs. This is why the Media Guild of the West voted unanimously to support the bill.

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News/Media Alliance AI Principles https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/ai-principles/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/ai-principles/#respond Thu, 20 Apr 2023 14:36:34 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13607 This document highlights the overarching principles that must guide the development and use of GAI systems as well as the policies and regulations governing them.

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The News/Media Alliance (NMA) represents the most trusted publishers in print and digital media based in the United States, from small, local outlets to national and international publications read around the world. Every day, these publishers invest in producing high-quality creative content that is engaging, informative, trustworthy, accurate and reliable. In doing so, they not only make significant economic contributions, but they also play a crucial role in educating, upskilling and informing our communities, building our democracy and economy, and furthering America’s economic, security and political interests abroad.

Introduction

As generative artificial intelligence (GAI) technologies become more prevalent, our membership believes these new tools must only be developed respecting journalistic and creative content, in accordance with principles that protect publishers’ intellectual property (IP), brands, reader relationships, and investments. The unlicensed use of content created by our companies and journalists by GAI systems is an intellectual property infringement: GAI systems are using proprietary content without permission. It’s also critical to acknowledge the societal risks associated with the proliferation of mis- and dis-information through GAI, which high-quality, original content, produced by skilled humans and trusted brands, can help to combat.

GAI developers and deployers must negotiate with publishers for the right to use their content in any of the following manners:

  • Training: Including publishers’ content in datasets and using it for GAI system training and testing.
  • Surfacing: The serving of publishers’ content in response to user inputs, possibly including a cover note generated by the GAI system of what is contained in the surfaced content.
  • Synthesizing: Summaries, explanations, analyses etc. of source content in response to a query.
This document highlights the overarching principles that must guide the development and use of GAI systems as well as the policies and regulations governing them. These principles are founded on our understanding of these systems and technologies as they are currently used – and may therefore be amended as these technologies and uses develop – and apply equally to all publisher content, whether in text, image, audiovisual or any other format.

AI Principles

Intellectual Property

Developers and deployers of GAI must respect creators’ rights to their content. These rights include copyright and all other legal protections afforded to content creators and owners, as well as contractual restrictions or limitations imposed by publishers for the access and use of their content (including through their on-line terms of service). Developers and deployers of GAI systems—as well as legislators, regulators and other parties involved in drafting laws and policies regarding GAI—must maintain an unwavering respect for these rights and recognize the value of creators’ proprietary content. GAI developers and deployers should not use publisher IP without permission, and publishers should have the right to negotiate for fair compensation for use of their IP by these developers. Professional journalism is particularly valuable due to its reliability, accuracy, coherency and timeliness, enhancing GAI system outputs and improving perceptions of system quality. Absent permission and specific licenses, GAI systems are not simply using publishers’ content, they are stealing it.

Use of publishers’ IP requires explicit permission. Use of publisher content by GAI systems for training, surfacing and synthesizing is not authorized by most publishers’ terms and conditions, and authorization for search should not be construed as an authorization for uses such as training GAI systems or displaying more content than contemplated for or as used in traditional search.  GAI system developers and deployers should not be crawling, ingesting or using publishers’ proprietary content without express authorization; requiring publishers to opt out is not acceptable. Negotiating written, formal agreements is therefore necessary.  Industry standards should be developed to allow for automatic detection of permissions that distinguish among potential uses of crawled or scraped content.  These standards and usage agreements can also address other issues such as attribution, monetization, responsibility, and derivative uses.

Compensation agreements must account for harms GAI systems may cause publishers and the public. GAI system surfacing and synthesizing are providing much more proprietary content and information from the original sources than traditional search and often provide little or no attribution, and will exacerbate the growing trend toward zero-click, reducing or even eliminating value for publishers. GAI systems use publishers’ proprietary content to generate outputs that may replace their role in the consumer/information provider relationship. In addition to reducing traffic, this harms publisher brands that have taken years, decades, or even centuries to build.

Copyright laws must protect, not harm, content creators. The fair use doctrine does not justify the unauthorized use of publisher content, archives and databases for and by GAI systems.  Any previous or existing use of such content without express permission is a violation of copyright law. The Section 1201 triennial rulemaking process should not be used to allow for the bypassing of content protections for GAI development purposes. Exceptions to copyright protections for text and data mining (TDM) should be narrowly tailored to limited nonprofit and research purposes that do not damage publishers or become pathways for unauthorized uses that would otherwise require permission.  The U.S. also has made international law commitments in this area that protect its IP-based businesses across multiple sectors and these must be upheld in its approach to AI.

There is an existing market for licensing publishers’ news content. Valuing publishers’ legitimate IP interests need not impede GAI innovation because compensation frameworks (for example, licensing) already exist to permit use in return for payment. GAI innovation should not come at the expense of publishers, but rather at the expense of developers and deployers.  Publishers encourage the use of efficient ways to license through standard-setting organizations that can facilitate efficient training of GAI systems.

Transparency

GAI systems should be transparent to publishers. Publishers have a right to know who copied our content and what they are using it for. We call for strong regulations and policies imposing transparency requirements to the extent necessary for publishers to enforce their rights. Publishers have a legitimate interest in determining what content of theirs has been and is used in GAI systems. Using datasets or applications developed by non-profit, research, or educational third parties to power commercial GAI systems must be clearly disclosed and not used to evade transparency obligations or copyright liability.

GAI systems should be transparent to users. Direct relationships between users and publishers are critical for the sustainability of the news media and informational content sector. Surfaced and synthesized outputs should connect, not disintermediate, users with publishers. Members of the public should know the source of information that may affect them.  Generative outputs should include clear and prominent attributions in a way that identifies to users the original sources of the output and encourages users to easily and directly navigate to those products, as well as to let them know when content is generated by GAI. Transparency into GAI systems can also help prevent misuse and the spread of mis- and dis-information. Similarly, it enables the evaluation of GAI systems for unintended bias to avoid discriminatory outcomes.

Accountability

Deployers of GAI systems should be held accountable for system outputs. GAI systems pose risks for competition, the integrity of news and creative content, and for public trust in the journalistic and creative content. This is aggravated by the ability of AI applications to devalue publisher brands by generating content that attributes false or inaccurate information to publishers who have not published the information and who have processes in place to prevent such publication in the first place. Accordingly, deployers of GAI systems should not be shielded from liability for their outputs—to do so would be to provide deployers of GAI systems with an unfair advantage against which traditional publishers cannot compete and increase the danger to the public and institutions from the unchecked power of this technology.

Fairness

GAI systems should not create, or risk creating, unfair market or competition outcomes. Regulators should be attuned to ensuring GAI systems are designed, deployed, and used in a way that is compliant with competition laws and principles. Developers and deployers should also use their best efforts to ensure that GAI models are not used for anti-competitive purposes. The use of publisher content for GAI purposes without express permission from content owners by firms that have market power in online content distribution should be considered evidence of a violation of competition laws.  Regulators should be vigilant for other anti-competitive uses of GAI systems.

Safety

GAI systems should be safe and avoid privacy risks. GAI systems, including GAI models, should be designed to respect the privacy of users who interact with them. Early indications are that GAI tools will exacerbate trends towards digital platforms collecting large volumes of user data. The collection and use of personal data in GAI system design, training and use should be minimal and should be disclosed to users in an easily understandable manner so that users can make informed judgments about how their data is used in exchange for the GAI service. Users should be informed about, and should have the right to prevent, the use of their interactions with GAI systems for the purposes of training or collection of personal data.  Systems should also be designed in a way that means paywalled and otherwise protected content cannot be exposed (including but not limited to, for example, by membership inference methods).

Design

All of the principles discussed above should be incorporated in the very design of GAI systems, as significant elements of the design, and not considered as an afterthought or a minor concern to be addressed when convenient or when a third party brings a claim.

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Statement: News Publishers Call on President Biden to Defend Local Journalism in Canada Visit https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-publishers-call-on-president-biden-to-defend-local-journalism-in-canada-visit/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-publishers-call-on-president-biden-to-defend-local-journalism-in-canada-visit/#respond Wed, 22 Mar 2023 21:20:19 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13600 Ahead of President Biden’s meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the News/Media Alliance is calling on the President to defend local journalism from Big Tech giants seeking to undermine efforts in Canada and the United States that would help save high-quality journalism.

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Ahead of President Biden’s meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the News/Media Alliance is calling on the President to defend local journalism from Big Tech giants seeking to undermine efforts in Canada and the United States that would help save high-quality journalism.

“Google and Meta have repeatedly attempted to avoid paying news publishers for the high-quality, local journalism that publishers invest significant resources into producing, while the platforms enjoy a steady stream of users and ad revenue and news publishers struggle,” stated Danielle Coffey, Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the News/Media Alliance. “First in Australia, then in the U.S., and now in Canada, Meta and Google have threatened to remove news from their platforms and risk harming the public rather than pay for content they did not create. We cannot continue to allow Big Tech to exert their dominance any longer. The stakes – the survival of local journalism – are too great.”

When Australia was considering its News Media Bargaining Code, Meta ‘deliberately caused havoc’ amid the COVID-19 pandemic to influence the law. Their threats didn’t work, and the News Media Bargaining Code has helped news publishers there reach deals with the platforms. Meta made similar threats when the Canadian legislature introduced the Online News Act (C-18) last year and fought similar bipartisan efforts in Congress to pass the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) in December. In addition, Google has been testing removing news from its platform in Canada in the event C-18 becomes law.

The Alliance deeply appreciates the President’s efforts to promote competition across the American economy and calls on every corner of the Administration to stand strong against Big Tech’s efforts to resist fair payment that will help keep newsrooms open across the United States and the world.

The Alliance encourages Congress to pass the JCPA in the United States, which would establish fair terms of engagement between news publishers and platforms such as Facebook and Google. America’s publishers continue to support the global efforts in Canada, the UK, India, and Taiwan to promote fairness between the companies who employ hardworking journalists and the dominant online platforms that seek to exploit news content and divert advertising dollars to their own bottom line.

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Statement: News/Media Alliance Signs Creative Industry Principles on Artificial Intelligence https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-media-alliance-signs-creative-industry-principles-on-artificial-intelligence/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-media-alliance-signs-creative-industry-principles-on-artificial-intelligence/#respond Thu, 16 Mar 2023 21:30:45 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13594 Today, the News/Media Alliance signed on to principles developed by a coalition of creative industry organizations, the Human Artistry CampAIgn, outlining high-level principles that should govern the relationship between Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications and human-created content and creativity.

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Today, the News/Media Alliance signed on to principles developed by a coalition of creative industry organizations, the Human Artistry CampAIgn, outlining high-level principles that should govern the relationship between Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications and human-created content and creativity. The principles address issues such as use of copyrighted content, transparency, and inclusion of the creative industries in the policy making process. The document was launched during a South by Southwest (SXSW) panel “Welcome to the Machine: Art in the Age of A.I.

Danielle Coffey, Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the Alliance, stated: “As AI applications become more prevalent in our society, we need to establish clear principles that govern the responsible development and use of these new technologies and applications. We are proud to join this coalition of like-minded organizations and will continue to advocate diligently for regulations and law to protect creators with respect to AI in the same manner it does with respect to other technologies and industries.”

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Journalism, Media & Economic Competition Advocates Call on President Biden to Show Support for Legislation That Would Help Save Local Journalism in State of the Union Address https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-journalism-media-economic-competition-advocates-call-on-president-biden-to-show-support-for-legislation-that-would-help-save-local-journalism-in-state-of-the-union-address/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/release-journalism-media-economic-competition-advocates-call-on-president-biden-to-show-support-for-legislation-that-would-help-save-local-journalism-in-state-of-the-union-address/#respond Mon, 30 Jan 2023 18:00:08 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13498 Seven leading journalism, media, and pro-consumer antitrust advocacy organizations today sent a joint letter to President Joseph Biden calling on him to highlight, in his upcoming State of the Union address on February 7, the importance of local journalism. The letter highlights the urgent need for congressional action to preserve a strong democracy and a free press. Specifically, the letter urges President Biden to call on Congress to advance the bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act.

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Letter Asks Biden to Call on Congress to Pass the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Arlington, VA – Seven leading journalism, media, and pro-consumer antitrust advocacy organizations today sent a joint letter to President Joseph Biden calling on him to highlight, in his upcoming State of the Union address on February 7, the importance of local journalism. The letter highlights the urgent need for congressional action to preserve a strong democracy and a free press. Specifically, the letter urges President Biden to call on Congress to advance the bipartisan Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) (S. 673 and H.R. 1735). The legislation will give small, local news outlets the ability to join together in negotiations that will level the playing field with Big Tech platforms. Small and local publishers currently do not have the ability to negotiate jointly for fair payment to counter the dominant power of Big Tech platforms. That imbalance allows tech monopolies to capture the vast majority of U.S. digital ad revenue, leaving local publishers with little to reinvest in the production of high-quality journalism.

The organizations that signed on to the letter include the News/Media Alliance, National Newspaper Association, America’s Newspapers, Authors Guild, American Economic Liberties Project, Inter American Press Association, and the Radio Television Digital News Association.

The letter outlines the plight of local news, in which news publishers have been forced to play by Big Tech’s rules of the digital advertising playing field for years, resulting in the loss of more than a quarter of U.S. newspapers since 2005 and the spread of news deserts across the country. In their letter, the groups underscore the importance of passing the JCPA as the best solution to ensuring news publishers are compensated fairly for use of their content by the dominant tech platforms, asking President Biden to call on Congress to pass the bill, which was introduced in the 117th Congress in 2021 and successfully marked up by the Senate Judiciary Committee last September. In addition, the groups ask Biden to call on Congress to pass the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, which would incentivize investments in local journalism through the tax code.

The letter states in part:

“While America has long been a beacon of light when it comes to freedom of the press, that light has grown dimmer due to the monopolistic shadow of the Big Tech giants. The largest tech platforms dominate revenue streams online, with Google and Facebook in control of an estimated 60 to 70 percent of digital ad markets. These anticompetitive behaviors are further highlighted in the Justice Department’s recently filed lawsuit against Google, which alleges monopoly abuse by the company in the online advertising market.

To stop that light from going out and allow America’s free press to continue to contribute to our nation’s resilience and serve as a model of democracy to the world, we need bipartisan action from Congress. The local news outlets we represent and others that prioritize a free press ask that you use your State of the Union address to call on the House and Senate to urgently advance key legislation to your desk that will help save local journalism.”

The JCPA has broad support, not only in Congress in both the House and the Senate (on both sides of the aisle – including 90 total co-sponsors), but also from over 300 consumer interest groups, unions, conservatives, advocacy groups and third-party organizations that have shown support for the JCPA by sending letters of support to the bill sponsors. In addition, over 24,000 individuals have signed a Change.org petition for the bill and nearly 1,000 editorials and op-eds in support of the JCPA have been published in newspapers in 48 states across the country. In a recent poll of 1,000 U.S. adults conducted by Schoen Cooperman Research for the News/Media Alliance, 70 percent of Americans said they support Congress passing the JCPA.

View the joint letter here.

For more information about the JCPA, visit www.JCPABill.com.

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Media Contact:
Lindsey Loving
Director, Communications
lindsey@newsmediaalliance.org

The News/Media Alliance is a nonprofit organization representing more than 2,000 news and magazine media organizations and their multiplatform businesses in the United States and globally. Alliance members include print and digital publishers of original journalism. Headquartered just outside Washington, D.C., the association focuses on ensuring the future of journalism through communication, research, advocacy, and innovation. Information about the News/Media Alliance can be found at www.newsmediaalliance.org.

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Statement: News/Media Alliance Applauds Department of Justice for Filing Antitrust Lawsuit Against Google https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-media-alliance-applauds-department-of-justice-for-filing-antitrust-lawsuit-against-google/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/statement-news-media-alliance-applauds-department-of-justice-for-filing-antitrust-lawsuit-against-google/#respond Tue, 24 Jan 2023 21:19:20 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13486 Today the Department of Justice filed its highly anticipated antitrust lawsuit against Google for its dominance in advertising and violation of the Sherman Act. This monumental lawsuit is based on years of investigation and claims against the dominant monopoly.

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Today the Department of Justice (DOJ) filed its highly anticipated antitrust lawsuit against Google for its dominance in advertising and violation of the Sherman Act. This monumental lawsuit is based on years of investigation and claims against the dominant monopoly. Alleging instances of “tying” its products, Google’s ad exchange and ad server, has a detriment to those who produce the content on what was once a free and open internet.

“This marks an important day in our history where a dominant monopoly is being charged for blatantly anticompetitive behavior in the digital advertising market. This behavior impacts consumers’ data, prices, and the quality of information they receive, while journalism struggles to provide valuable and critical content that informs and enriches communities across the country,” said News/Media Alliance Executive Vice President & General Counsel, Danielle Coffey.

For many years, the News/Media Alliance has sounded the alarm on this issue through testimony and written filings, including its white paper, “How Google Abuses Its Position as a Market Dominant Platform to Strong-Arm News Publishers and Hurt Journalism,” published in 2020 and revised in September 2022, which substantiates Google’s dominance in the marketplace, including member news publisher accounts of anticompetitive practices. Google’s take from publishers is up to 70 percent of every advertising dollar received. This has a significant impact on what news publishers and magazines receive for their content.

Coffey continued, “Along with this antitrust lawsuit, legislation like the Journalism Competition & Preservation Act (JCPA) is sorely needed to address these marketplace imbalances. The lawsuit draws a direct nexus between the anticompetitive practices and those who are harmed, notably the free press. We applaud the DOJ and various states that have filed this historic case during a time of critical importance to our industry and others impacted by these practices.”

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Big Tech Threat to Local Journalism Still Exists, Congress Committed to Fixing That Problem Through JCPA https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/big-tech-threat-to-local-journalism-still-exists-congress-committed-to-fixing-that-problem-through-jcpa/ https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/big-tech-threat-to-local-journalism-still-exists-congress-committed-to-fixing-that-problem-through-jcpa/#respond Fri, 20 Jan 2023 21:50:50 +0000 https://www.newsmediaalliance.org/?p=13476 News/Media Alliance's EVP & General Counsel, Danielle Coffey, provides a recap of the efforts around the Journalism Competition & Preservation Act in the 117th Congress and the bill's outlook in the next Congress.

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Photo credit: rarrarorro / iStock/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images

Also published in America’s Newspapers’ e-newsletter here. 

Following the re-introduction of the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (H.R. 1735 / S. 673) (JCPA) in 2021, the News/Media Alliance and its allies worked to advocate for the bill’s passage during the 117th Congress. The JCPA would allow small and local news publishers to come together to collectively negotiate with Google and Facebook for fair compensation for use of their content. News publishers, magazines and broadcasters currently do not have the ability to negotiate deals on their own, as the dominant tech platforms capture the majority of U.S. digital ad revenue, leaving little to reinvest in the production of high-quality journalism.

The Senate Judiciary Committee’s subcommittee on antitrust hosted a hearing for the JCPA in February of 2022, allowing for substantive conversation on the legislation, and garnering further interest from Congressional leaders. The Alliance and its allies followed up on this hearing by meeting with Congressional staffers and organizing grassroots outreach, resulting in over 2,000 touchpoints on Capitol Hill over the summer. These efforts led to a successful Senate Judiciary Committee markup on September 22, where the JCPA was reported favorably to the Senate floor with a committee vote of 15-7.

Policymakers are motivated to stand up for the vital public institution of journalism and push back against anticompetitive business practices. A thriving press performs a critical role in building and engaging local communities and holding government officials accountable. There is broad agreement in the U.S. – on both sides of the aisle, not only on the Hill but among members the public – that action is needed to protect local journalism. An April 2022 poll of 1,000 U.S. adults conducted by Schoen Cooperman Research for the News/Media Alliance found that 70 percent of Americans support Congress passing the JCPA.

In December, nine leading media and journalism organizations, including the Alliance, Americas Newspapers, National Newspaper Association, the American Economic Liberties Project, and others sent a joint letter to Congressional leaders calling on the Congress to pass the JCPA before the end of 2022. The groups underscored the importance of passing the JCPA as the best solution to ensuring news publishers are compensated fairly for use of their content by the dominant tech platforms.

Over the past few years, Australia and the European Union have witnessed the benefits of their recently enacted laws to protect journalism. The Australian model, which requires the dominant tech platforms to pay publishers for use of their original content, has prompted other countries including Canada, India and the UK to take steps towards adopting similar laws. The results in Australia have been transformative for journalism. As a result of its News Media Bargaining Code adopted in 2021, estimates suggest that the total compensation received by news publishers so far – $140 million, which translates to billions in the U.S. – would cover around 20% of the costs of Australian journalists’ salaries. In addition, Australian newspapers are recruiting more journalists, with journalism professors noting an oversupply of available positions for their students. This is despite the fact that no platform has yet been “designated” under the Code – an official determination requiring the designated platform to negotiate with eligible publishers. The mere threat of designation has resulted in successful negotiations between news publishers and the platforms and provides evidence of the value of an Australian-style model for other countries to follow.

The Alliance and its allies successfully advocated for inclusion of the JCPA in the NDAA in December, only to have it removed after Meta threatened to remove news from its platform and Republicans reversed support and demanded a “clean” bill. Threats like Meta made were attempted before the Australian government passed its Code – they were unsuccessful, and news publishers ultimately got paid. As the tech platforms compensate news publishers around the world, it demonstrates the demand and economic value for news.

In the 117th Congress, the JCPA garnered bipartisan support with 75 co-sponsors in the House and 15 in the Senate. The Alliance continues to hold conversations with the JCPA’s Congressional champions, who intend to reintroduce the bill in the 118th Congress. The congressional champions are eager to move the bill, mobilized after the momentum gained at the end of last year. The abuse of dominance by the tech platforms and threat to local journalism still exists, and leaders in Congress are still committed to fixing that problem. The Alliance remains dedicated to ensuring quality journalism prevails and intend to work alongside our allies to ensure a legislative solution moves forward in this Congress.

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