The accord was signed with a number of Italian publishers, including RCS Mediagroup, which publishes daily Corriere della Sera as well as popular sports daily Gazzetta dello Sport, the publisher of financial daily Il Sole 24 ore, Caltagirone editore, which owns Rome-based paper Il Messaggero, and Monrif, which publishes local papers such as Il Giorno and La Nazione.
To date, 13 Italian editorial companies have finalised agreements with Google, giving users access to content from 76 national and local papers.
“We are pleased to have reached this agreement which, by also regulating the issue of related rights, recognises the importance of quality information and the authority of our publications,” RCS Chief Exectuive Urbano Cairo said in a statement.
No financial details of the accord were disclosed.
News publishers have long fought the world’s most popular Internet search engine for compensation for using their content, with European media groups leading the charge.
Google said in October it planned to pay $1 billion (roughly Rs. 7,260 crore) to publishers globally for their news over the next three years via Showcase, which will launch first in Germany, then in Belgium, India, the Netherlands, and other countries.
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