Brazilian Press Wants Its Share of Google’s Billions

The Brazilian press knows it is not going to be a walk in the park, but this is not preventing it from taking on Internet search giants like Google, Yahoo, and MSN.

What the owners of newspapers in Brazil want is their share of the billions those companies get for indexing all the content, news and opinion pieces, they produce day in and day out at high cost.

It was the just-reelected president of Brazil’s Newspapers National Association (ANJ), Nelson Sirotsky, who announced at the  closing of the 6th Brazilian Newspapers Congress that he is going to try to engage in a dialogue with Brazilian and international search engine companies.

Sirotsky is not talking about any lawsuit at the moment, but he isn’t discounting this possibility either. Another item disclosed by the ANJ’s honcho is that his association will soon start a program to raise the interest of school children in reading newspapers.

According to Sirotsky, what the Internet search companies are doing is embezzlement since they are presenting material they didn’t produce themselves  and then fraudulently keeping money that doesn’t belong to them. Sirotsky doesn’t want, however, to close these indexing services as long as they share the money they are making with the content producers.

In Brazil many newspapers and magazines are already keeping the search engines outside their borders. The site Universo on Line (UOL), for example, hosts dozens of publications including Brazil’s largest-circulation newspaper and magazine, Folha de S. Paulo and Veja, respectively.

They are open exclusively for paying members and out of the search engines’ reach. They have, however, stripped down Internet versions of their product. The same happens to O Estado de S. Paulo, another national high-circulation daily.

Commenting on Sirotsky proposal, São Paulo governor, Cláudio Lembo told reporters, "It is natural that the newspapers demand their copyrights, since they are the ones who invest in the production of this content." Lembo, as well as Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took part in the ANJ’s meeting

Nelson Sirotsky, who is director-president of the group RBS, from the southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul, says that the printed newspapers are entering "a revival cycle."

And he added, "A few years ago we used to talk with much skepticism and worry about our activity’s future outlook. Fortunately, we had the chance to witness, during our meeting, that we are living a cycle of new opportunities, thanks to our technological environment and the habits of our consumers."

Tags:

You May Also Like

Rhodia factory in Paulínia, São Paulo, Brazil

Rhodia Invests US$ 41 Million is Its Main Brazilian Factory

French chemical company Rhodia announced today that it will invest US$ 41 million in ...

Brazil’s Lula Can’t Be Like All the Others

Brazilian President Lula da Silva should stop repeating partial projects and embody an alternative ...

Pretty Woman, 30, Paid to Be Killed, Say Brazilian Police

The police of Fortaleza, the capital city of the northeastern state of Ceará, in ...

The Way We Were

An exhibition of paintings by the Dutch artist, Albert Eckhout has sparked a revival ...

The World Is in Brazil Drawing Plans to Fight Terror and Money-Laundering

Antonio Gustavo Rodrigues, president of the Financial Activities Control Council (COAF) in Brazil’s Ministry ...

Brazil Would Like a More Balanced Trade with Algeria

The Brazilian government is interested in negotiating a trade agreement with Algeria. The subject ...

Singing Along

In Brazil, children’s songs were performed with no instruments, always in a circle where ...

Brazilian Doing Brisk Business Selling Tiles Made from Plastic Bottles

It was 12 years ago that Brazilian engineer Luiz Antônio Pereira Fomariz from the ...

Brazil's gay couple kiss in Goiânia's Gay Pride Parade

Brazilian Bill Would Jail Priests and Pastors Who Oppose Homosexuality

Legislation under consideration by the Brazilian Senate that would make any public expression of ...

Brazil Is Right in Demanding New Fact Before Recognizing Honduras’s New President

Whether one sides with the ousted President Manuel Zelaya or with the interim leader ...