Google Is Paying Publishers to Test an Unreleased Gen AI Platform
In exchange for a five-figure sum, publishers must use the tool to publish 3 
stories per day

By Mark Stenberg

Google launched a private program for a handful of independent publishers last 
month, providing the news organizations with beta access to an unreleased 
generative artificial intelligence platform in exchange for receiving analytics 
and feedback, according to documents seen by ADWEEK.

As part of the agreement, the publishers are expected to use the suite of tools 
to produce a fixed volume of content for 12 months. In return, the news outlets 
receive a monthly stipend amounting to a five-figure sum annually, as well as 
the means to produce content relevant to their readership at no cost.

“In partnership with news publishers, especially smaller publishers, we’re in 
the early stages of exploring ideas to potentially provide AI-enabled tools to 
help journalists with their work,” a Google representative said in a statement. 
“These tools are not intended to, and cannot, replace the essential role 
journalists have in reporting, creating and fact-checking their articles.” 
The AI-enabled results could throttle readership to an ‘apocalyptic’ degree.

The beta tools let under-resourced publishers create aggregated content more 
efficiently by indexing recently published reports generated by other 
organizations, like government agencies and neighboring news outlets, and then 
summarizing and publishing them as a new article. 

Other gen AI experiments Google has released over the past two years include 
the codenamed Genesis, which can reportedly produce whole news articles and was 
privately demonstrated to several publishers last summer, according to The New 
York Times. Others, including Search Generative Experience and Gemini, are 
available for public use and threaten to upend many of the commercial 
foundations of digital publishing.

The program is part of the Google News Initiative, which launched in 2018 to 
provide publishers with technology and training. 

Although many of its programs indisputably benefit the publishers involved, the 
broader reception of GNI has been mixed. 

Google has used GNI to drum up positive press and industry goodwill during 
moments of reputational duress, and many of the commercial problems it aims to 
solve for publishers were created by Google in the first place, said Digital 
Content Next CEO Jason Kint.

“The larger point here is that Google is in legislative activity and antitrust 
enforcement globally for extracting revenue from the publishing world,” Kint 
said. “Instead of giving up some of that revenue, it’s attacking the cost side 
for its long-tail members with the least bargaining power.” 

Details of the program

Google first shared a call for news organizations to apply to test the emerging 
technologies in an October edition of the Local Independent Online News 
newsletter.

GNI began onboarding publishers in January, and the yearlong program kicked off 
in February.

According to the conditions of the agreement, participating publishers must use 
the platform to produce and publish three articles per day, one newsletter per 
week and one marketing campaign per month. 

To produce articles, publishers first compile a list of external websites that 
regularly produce news and reports relevant to their readership. These sources 
of original material are not asked for their consent to have their content 
scraped or notified of their participation in the process—a potentially 
troubling precedent, said Kint. 

When any of these indexed websites produce a new article, it appears on the 
platform dashboard. The publisher can then apply the gen AI tool to summarize 
the article, altering the language and style of the report to read like a news 
story. 

The resulting copy is underlined in different colors to indicate its potential 
accuracy: yellow, with language taken almost verbatim from the source material, 
is the most accurate, followed by blue and then red, with text that is least 
based on the original report. 

A human editor then scans the copy for accuracy before publishing three such 
stories per day. The program does not require that these AI-assisted articles 
be labeled.

The platform cannot gather facts or information that have not already been 
produced elsewhere, limiting its utility for premium publishers. 

Articles produced by the platform could also draw traffic away from the 
original sources, negatively affecting their businesses. The process resembles 
the ripping technique newly in use at Reach plc, except that in this case, the 
text is pulled from external sources.

“I think this calls into question the mission of GNI,” Kint said. “It’s hard to 
argue that stealing people’s work supports the mission of the news. This is not 
adding any new information to the mix.”

https://www.adweek.com/media/google-paying-publishers-unreleased-gen-ai/
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