Media News - Thursday, September 10, 2009
Google plans tools to help news media charge for content
Google is planning to roll out a system of micropayments within the next
year and hopes that newspapers will use it as they look for new ways to
charge users for their content. The revelation was made in a document that Google sent to the Newspaper
Association of America in response to a request for paid-content
proposals that the association sent to several technology companies.
The Google document, which was first publicized by the Nieman Journalism Lab, indicates that the micropayment system will be an extension of
Google Checkout, a payment system that Google rolled out in 2006 and
positioned as a competitor to eBay’s PayPal service, the leading system
for online payments. “While currently in the early planning stages, micropayments will be a
payment vehicle available to both Google and non-Google properties
within the next year,” Google wrote. “The idea is to allow viable
payments of a penny to several dollars by aggregating purchases across
merchants and over time.” Ten other companies responded to the association’s request, including
Microsoft, I.B.M. and Oracle. But Google’s plans are particularly
interesting because of the delicate relationship between the newspaper
industry and the company. In the document, Google said that newspapers could also use Checkout to
charge for subscriptions, but it described the system for managing the
subscriptions as “fairly rudimentary.” (New York Times blog)
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