Google has threatened to pull out of Australia amid negotiations for a digital news code which would force Google and Facebook to pay news media companies for content.
While Google Drive, maps and Gmail would still be accessible, searching Google for business listings, news articles, and information about your latest health scare would no longer be possible.
Despite search engine alternatives such as Bing, Yahoo, and DuckDuckGo, some say the change would decimate small businesses, while others say Google’s threat shows just how important breaking up such a powerful company is.
What value does Google bring?
There are more than 2.3 million actively trading businesses in the Australian economy. The vast majority of them are small. In 2018-19 businesses who don’t employ anyone, such as freelancers and sole traders, accounted for 62.8% of all businesses in 2018-19, while 69.1% of employing businesses had between one and four employees. Of all businesses, 93% had a turnover of less than $2 million.
Small businesses rely on Google, which accounted for 91.28% of online searches in Australia in December 2020, for listings and reviews. During the pandemic, many customer-facing businesses had to shut their stores and offices, shifting to online sales and services. For this, they relied on Google to funnel shoppers to their sites. Demand for online digital skills training through Google My Business doubled when Australia went through its first lockdown.
In September, the federal government announced $419.9 million in grants for businesses to update their digital systems and another $20 million to help small businesses improve their digital capability.
Monopolies need to be broken up
Council of Small Business of Australia CEO Peter Strong told Crikey Google’s threat showed just how important it was to break up its monopoly.
“This threat has really reinforced the need to fix the problem of one company having such a stronghold over businesses,” he said.
“Google has sent us a huge message which is don’t rely on one provider.”
Strong says that while not having Google would cause some headaches, businesses were adaptable.
“There are other search engines and businesses are amazing at how they respond to crises,” he said.
He supports the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC) code presented to Google and Facebook and said action should have been taken earlier to limit Google’s power.
“They say let the market decide, we say make sure the market can decide,” he said.
Strong thinks one solution would be to develop different search engines for different industries and have the government create search engines for its portfolios such as finance and defence.
Hard times for small businesses
Digital marketing company Localsearch’s director of digital and growth Adam Boote isn’t so optimistic, warning the move would kill businesses.
“If Google turns off their search engine, businesses will be required to start from scratch with their marketing,” he said in a statement.
“Organic Google searches is one of the only online platforms where even the smallest business can compete with the big corporations.”
Google Australia managing director Mel Silva told a Senate committee on Friday that withdrawing Google’s search engine wasn’t a threat, but a “worst case scenario” if the code went ahead.
She said the code was untenable and presented an unmanageable financial and operational risk.
“Withdrawing our services from Australia is the last thing that Google wants to have happen, especially when there is another way forward.”
I wonder how popular a Google service that prevents any News Corp or Fairfax/9 content from ever appearing on one’s digital devices would be?
I can imagine people might even pay for a service that attempted to remove content from extreme ideological news pseudo-services.
That would certainly find favour with me -I object strongly to this flaccid organ constantly providing links to NewsCorpse.
Pay for their very own Orwellian electronic thought police and attendent censorship regime? Yeah. I don’t suppose that one should discount it.
I feel I need to state that I have not purchased any from NewsCorp for years.
it’s one in – all in.
taking out news or nine or 7west would be specifically an illegal act if any other news was included.
very strange piece of law from these faux Conservatives.
Thanks – I wasn’t aware it grouped all news sources together. Have gone to the source at https://www.accc.gov.au/focus-areas/digital-platforms/news-media-bargaining-code/draft-legislation.
Crikey, it sure is tricky for a layperson to comprehend this gobbledygook.
A argument based on mis truths is no argument as purported by Peter Strong.
If what he said was half a truth then why does Muckracker Murdich hold sway over journalism in thus country, why is such a Right Wing media allowed to monopolise?
Yeah! There are always alternatuves, but those that are blinkered only see what they want.
Is there any policy that this government has not made a hash of? But this is one that has clearly not been thought through in any intelligent way. Rupert said jump and here we are. World-class incompetence.
Why can’t users just employ a VPN to make it appear that their inquiry is originating from a country other than Australia?
I have a vpn..but shhh do not say it to loud as cyber security maybe trolling these sites. Mein Fuhrer Dutton might have clandestine spy netwirks tracking comments!
Grandma still needs her yellow pages….. 🙂
Plenty of grandmas and -pas out there who were among the first to use email. So, lets not be ageist. The internet has been around in most of its current form since the early 90’s. Get real.
Mr Strong thinks the Australian government could build search engines to match Google.
The only way Austrslisn Government could or would build it is if somewhere in the mix it had associates or friends within the process to rort the system!
Great reading comprehension. Really deserved your 2 upvotes from other non readers.