Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed

    Huawei MatePad Mini: Launch date confirmed for compact flagship tablet with OLED screen

    P40WD-40: New Lenovo ThinkVision monitor leaks with Thunderbolt 4 and 120 Hz refresh rate for professionals

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Software and Apps
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Tech AI Verse
    • Home
    • Artificial Intelligence

      Blue-collar jobs are gaining popularity as AI threatens office work

      August 17, 2025

      Man who asked ChatGPT about cutting out salt from his diet was hospitalized with hallucinations

      August 15, 2025

      What happens when chatbots shape your reality? Concerns are growing online

      August 14, 2025

      Scientists want to prevent AI from going rogue by teaching it to be bad first

      August 8, 2025

      AI models may be accidentally (and secretly) learning each other’s bad behaviors

      July 30, 2025
    • Business

      Why Certified VMware Pros Are Driving the Future of IT

      August 24, 2025

      Murky Panda hackers exploit cloud trust to hack downstream customers

      August 23, 2025

      The rise of sovereign clouds: no data portability, no party

      August 20, 2025

      Israel is reportedly storing millions of Palestinian phone calls on Microsoft servers

      August 6, 2025

      AI site Perplexity uses “stealth tactics” to flout no-crawl edicts, Cloudflare says

      August 5, 2025
    • Crypto

      Chainlink (LINK) Price Uptrend Likely To Reverse as Charts Hint at Exhaustion

      August 31, 2025

      What to Expect From Solana in September

      August 31, 2025

      Bitcoin Risks Deeper Drop Toward $100,000 Amid Whale Rotation Into Ethereum

      August 31, 2025

      3 Altcoins Smart Money Are Buying During Market Pullback

      August 31, 2025

      Solana ETFs Move Closer to Approval as SEC Reviews Amended Filings

      August 31, 2025
    • Technology

      Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed

      August 31, 2025

      Huawei MatePad Mini: Launch date confirmed for compact flagship tablet with OLED screen

      August 31, 2025

      P40WD-40: New Lenovo ThinkVision monitor leaks with Thunderbolt 4 and 120 Hz refresh rate for professionals

      August 31, 2025

      Best AI Workstation Processors 2025: Why AMD Ryzen Beats Intel for Local AI Computing for now!

      August 31, 2025

      How to turn a USB flash drive into a portable games console

      August 31, 2025
    • Others
      • Gadgets
      • Gaming
      • Health
      • Software and Apps
    Check BMI
    Tech AI Verse
    You are at:Home»Technology»A wish list with limits: What publishers want to see from Google’s AI licensing deals
    Technology

    A wish list with limits: What publishers want to see from Google’s AI licensing deals

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseJuly 28, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    A wish list with limits: What publishers want to see from Google’s AI licensing deals
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    BMI Calculator – Check your Body Mass Index for free!

    A wish list with limits: What publishers want to see from Google’s AI licensing deals

    After years of scraping and stonewalling, Google is beginning to talk AI licensing with publishers. The shift has triggered a familiar mix of caution and resignation among media execs. They’ve seen this before: overtures of partnership that quietly lead to more platform control.

    The timing isn’t surprising. Amazon’s deal with The New York Times in June added urgency to a space where publishers are already uneasy about how their content is being used to train AI systems. 

    Now Google is playing catch up, reportedly holding exploratory talks with around 20 publishers. What comes of those talks is still a moving target. But the outlines of what publishers want are already clear. The demands are straightforward, if a little aspirational: real money, real transparency and — perhaps most elusive — a sense of control in a market that has rarely offered it.

    Digiday spoke with several publishers who broke it down into three core asks: meaningful revenue, clearer terms and a bit more control in a market that rarely gives it.

    Revenue that reflects value

    This one’s as much about principle as payout. 

    Publishers have spent years feeding the machine — training the AI, populating the search results, keeping users engaged — while Google reaped the rewards. Any check now comes too late to feel fair, but it’s still a line in the sand. 

    As one commercial exec at a publisher put it: “You have to assume the [upfront check] is the last time you’ll see that money.”

    That’s why hybrid deals — flat fees with variable upside tied to usage — are top of mind. They’ve surfaced in other content licensing agreements, like OpenAI’s deals with the Associated Press and Axel Springer, where payouts reflect not just access but continued use. 

    Without that, the core issue remains: AI Overviews and other products risk turning publishers into invisible suppliers — content creators cut off from the economics of their own work. 

    “On day one, it’s fair to say that Google, OpenAI or whoever else it may be won’t be making tons of money [from these days] but eventually they will and publishers should share in that upside over time and not be stuck in some crappy deal where the platform gets all the benefit,” said Paul Bannister, chief strategy officer at Raptive, which sells ads for independent sites.

    Of course, even a generous revenue share only goes so far. If visibility, attribution and traffic keep slipping, the money won’t matter. 

    Control over how their content is used and surfaced

    Beyond compensation, publishers want agency: where and how their content shows up, and under what terms. It’s arguably the most important, and least guaranteed, part of these deals. And as they shift from training data to real-time content ingestion, that demand is only growing louder. 

    As one publisher, who asked to remain anonymous given the sensitivity of the subject matter, explained: “The more we can understand how our data is being used by their AI algos, the better we can design going forward.” 

    Until now, that transparency has been limited — frustratingly so. Publishers say they’re often treated as if they’re asking for something extraordinary when in reality, they’re just asking for basic visibility into how their own content is being used. 

    When it comes to Google, publishers are wary that they’ll get the data they want. For more than a year, publishers have been piecing together how AI Overviews, the AI summaries in Google search, are impacting their referrals and visibility. Google doesn’t break out that data in any of its analytics platforms.

    “This must change. We need access to data to understand how these changes are affecting our business,” said Jacob Salamon, vp of business development at Trusted Media Brands. It’s a demand he and other TMB teams he spoke with have stressed, including TMB’s AI steering committee. 

    Needless to say, this part of the deal will be among the most closely watched. According to execs interviewed for this piece, publishers are asking for two things: APIs that allow real-time updates, corrections, standardized opt-outs and attribution protocols. 

    Lawsuits against AI companies (like the copyright infringement case The New York Times brought against OpenAI) could also reshape how these deals are structured going forward. The same goes for regulation.

    “The AI standards are evolving very, very rapidly,” the commercial exec said. “What may seem like a good deal today may not be a good deal in the future. There’s a number of lawsuits that are out there that — pending their outcomes — could meaningfully change the way in which these types of deals get constructed.”

    Partnership terms that restore power and predictability

    Beyond money and content controls, publishers are looking for something harder to quantify: stability. For years, their relationships with tech platforms have been marked by volatility — opaque traffic patterns, unpredictable monetization and shifting rules. With AI, that instability could deepen. That’s why some publishers have told Digiday they want to see more structured, renewable partnerships — ones that move beyond transactional licensing into longer-term alignment. 

    In fact, Salamon said TMB’s “dream alliance” would be one built on radical transparency, shared value and co-development. That means not just getting paid, but being involved: having a say in how AI products are built, gaining real-time access to data and getting tools to manage how content flows through those systems. It’s another key part of negotiations with AI licensing deals, publishing execs told Digiday.

    Other publishers want clearer legal protections, defined deal durations and visibility into what happens to their content once it’s ingested. Is it used for training, for inference, or both? What rights do they retain at the end of the agreement? 

    In short, they want predictability in an unpredictable market. Not just a payout today but terms that can evolve alongside the technology so they’re not caught flat-footed when the next shift comes. If they can’t get that then publishers worry they’re agreeing to partnerships in name only, with all the power still sitting on the other side of the table. It doesn’t help that those same partners are also reshaping the search ecosystem in ways that are shrinking the traffic our altogether.

    “You’re going to see the continuous erosion of human beings going to web pages to read articles,” said Matt Prohaska, CEO and principal of Prohaska Consulting. These deals are “going to be the next step in seeing which publishers are going to make it, and which aren’t,” Prohaska said.

    https://digiday.com/?p=584161

    BMI Calculator – Check your Body Mass Index for free!

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleWhite House AI Action Plan spurs debate among marketers over regulatory oversight in advertising
    Next Article Media Buying Briefing: The upfront is still not done — why and who’s benefiting from it
    TechAiVerse
    • Website

    Jonathan is a tech enthusiast and the mind behind Tech AI Verse. With a passion for artificial intelligence, consumer tech, and emerging innovations, he deliver clear, insightful content to keep readers informed. From cutting-edge gadgets to AI advancements and cryptocurrency trends, Jonathan breaks down complex topics to make technology accessible to all.

    Related Posts

    Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed

    August 31, 2025

    Huawei MatePad Mini: Launch date confirmed for compact flagship tablet with OLED screen

    August 31, 2025

    P40WD-40: New Lenovo ThinkVision monitor leaks with Thunderbolt 4 and 120 Hz refresh rate for professionals

    August 31, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Ping, You’ve Got Whale: AI detection system alerts ships of whales in their path

    April 22, 2025168 Views

    6.7 Cummins Lifter Failure: What Years Are Affected (And Possible Fixes)

    April 14, 202548 Views

    New Akira ransomware decryptor cracks encryptions keys using GPUs

    March 16, 202530 Views

    Is Libby Compatible With Kobo E-Readers?

    March 31, 202528 Views
    Don't Miss
    Technology August 31, 2025

    Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed

    Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed – what the mini PC with AMD Ryzen AI 7 350…

    Huawei MatePad Mini: Launch date confirmed for compact flagship tablet with OLED screen

    P40WD-40: New Lenovo ThinkVision monitor leaks with Thunderbolt 4 and 120 Hz refresh rate for professionals

    Best AI Workstation Processors 2025: Why AMD Ryzen Beats Intel for Local AI Computing for now!

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Tech AI Verse, your go-to destination for everything technology! We bring you the latest news, trends, and insights from the ever-evolving world of tech. Our coverage spans across global technology industry updates, artificial intelligence advancements, machine learning ethics, and automation innovations. Stay connected with us as we explore the limitless possibilities of technology!

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Asus ExpertCenter PN54 reviewed

    August 31, 20252 Views

    Huawei MatePad Mini: Launch date confirmed for compact flagship tablet with OLED screen

    August 31, 20252 Views

    P40WD-40: New Lenovo ThinkVision monitor leaks with Thunderbolt 4 and 120 Hz refresh rate for professionals

    August 31, 20252 Views
    Most Popular

    Xiaomi 15 Ultra Officially Launched in China, Malaysia launch to follow after global event

    March 12, 20250 Views

    Apple thinks people won’t use MagSafe on iPhone 16e

    March 12, 20250 Views

    French Apex Legends voice cast refuses contracts over “unacceptable” AI clause

    March 12, 20250 Views
    © 2025 TechAiVerse. Designed by Divya Tech.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.