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INTERNET

Germany’s Bild tabloid launches online paywall

Germany's sensationalist Bild daily, the biggest-selling European newspaper, plans to make readers pay for part of its online content from early next month, it said in its Tuesday edition.

Germany's Bild tabloid launches online paywall
Photo: DPA

In what it calls a “freemium model”, it will continue to provide free-access news on its popular website Bild.de but also offer premium content packages for subscription fees.

Readers who buy its print edition will be able to access the extra online content using a “Day Pass”, an individualised code unique to their daily copy.

“The ‘Day Pass’ has been implemented using a novel printing process that allows for the first time ever printing an individual code in every single paper,” said publisher Axel Springer in a statement.

Newspapers everywhere have struggled with falling circulation and advertising revenue and the problem of making profits online, where readers can get a lot of news for free.

Bild rejected the idea of a full “paywall” for its website but from June 11 will offer three different “BILDplus” packages from €4.99 to €14.99 a month. They will feature exclusive stories, pictures and interviews.

Paying subscribers can opt for a digital edition of the day’s newspaper and its Sunday version Bild am Sonntag, or receive coupons for a print edition they can pick up in a shop.

Another services starting in August allows football fans to add the “Bundesliga at BILD” package, with online video clips of matches and other multimedia coverage.

Bild, a tabloid-style paper in broadsheet format, reported a daily circulation of 2.58 million in the first quarter of the year and 12.27 million unique online users in March.

AFP/mry

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BUSINESS

Google News to return to Spain after seven-year spat

Google announced Wednesday the reopening of its news service in Spain next year after the country amended a law that imposed fees on aggregators such as the US tech giant for using publishers’ content.

Google News to return to Spain after seven-year spat
Google argues its news site drives readers to Spanish newspaper and magazine websites and thus helps them generate advertising revenue.Photo: Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP

The service closed in Spain in December 2014 after legislation passed requiring web platforms such as Google and Facebook to pay publishers to reproduce content from other websites, including links to their articles that describe a story’s content.

But on Tuesday the Spanish government approved a European Union copyright law that allows third-party online news platforms to negotiate directly with content providers regarding fees.

This means Google no longer has to pay a fee to Spain’s entire media industry and can instead negotiate fees with individual publishers.

Writing in a company blog post on Wednesday, Google Spain country manager Fuencisla Clemares welcomed the government move and announced that as a result “Google News will soon be available once again in Spain”.

“The new copyright law allows Spanish media outlets — big and small — to make their own decisions about how their content can be discovered and how they want to make money with that content,” she added.

“Over the coming months, we will be working with publishers to reach agreements which cover their rights under the new law.”

News outlets struggling with dwindling print subscriptions have long seethed at the failure of Google particularly to pay them a cut of the millions it makes from ads displayed alongside news stories.

Google argues its news site drives readers to newspaper and magazine websites and thus helps them generate advertising revenue and find new subscribers.

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