• Home
  • Latest News
  • Cryptocurrency and NFT
  • Virtual Worlds
  • Learning Zone
  • Videos
    • News
    • Learn
  • FAQ
  • Directory
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Metaverse News Outlet
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Cryptocurrency and NFT
  • Virtual Worlds
  • Learning Zone
  • Videos
    • News
    • Learn
  • FAQ
  • Directory
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Cryptocurrency and NFT
  • Virtual Worlds
  • Learning Zone
  • Videos
    • News
    • Learn
  • FAQ
  • Directory
No Result
View All Result
Metaverse News Outlet
No Result
View All Result
Home Latest News

Facebook Rethinks News Deals, and Publishers Stand to Lose Millions in Payments

2022-06-09
in Latest News
0
Facebook Rethinks News Deals, and Publishers Stand to Lose Millions in Payments
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Meta Platforms Inc.’s

Facebook is re-examining its commitment to paying for news, people familiar with the matter said, prompting some news organizations to prepare for a potential revenue shortfall of tens of millions of dollars.

The company has paid average annual fees of more than $15 million to the Washington Post, just over $20 million to the New York Times, and more than $10 million to The Wall Street Journal, according to people familiar with the matter. The Journal fee is part of a broader Facebook News deal largely negotiated by parent company Dow Jones & Co., including annual compensation worth more than $20 million, people familiar with the partnership said.

Facebook blocked people in Australia from viewing or sharing news articles as lawmakers debated a bill to compel social-media companies to pay for content. The legislation is being watched globally and could offer a model for other countries. (2/18/21) Photo: Josh Edelson/Getty Images

At the heart of these deals is Facebook’s dedicated News section, which curates a selection of free articles for readers. Facebook, which pays news publishers to feature their content without a paywall, in 2019 agreed to three-year deals with various publishers that are set to expire this year.

Facebook hasn’t provided publishers with any indication that it plans to re-up the partnerships in their current form, or at all, according to people familiar with the matter. The company is looking to shift its investments away from news and toward products that attract creators such as short-form video producers to compete with ByteDance Ltd.’s TikTok, according to some of the people. The company is also investing heavily in the metaverse, as highlighted by its recent name change to Meta.

Also, Meta CEO

Mark Zuckerberg

has been disappointed by regulatory efforts around the world looking to force platforms like Facebook and Alphabet Inc.’s Google to pay publishers for any news content available on their platforms, people familiar with the matter said. Such moves have damped Mr. Zuckerberg’s enthusiasm for making news a bigger part of Facebook’s offerings, they said.

Last month, Campbell Brown, the former NBC and CNN journalist who was the architect of Facebook News, announced she took on a new, broader role overseeing global media partnerships, which encompasses tie-ups with everything from sports leagues to film studios.


Newsletter Sign-up

Technology

A weekly digest of tech reviews, headlines, columns and your questions answered by WSJ’s Personal Tech gurus.


The Information earlier reported that Facebook was reconsidering its payments to publishers and shifting its emphasis.

If Facebook pulls back on its payments to U.S. news publishers, it would represent the end of a certain detente in the fraught relationship between online content makers and the social-media giant.

Publishers that have struggled to compete for digital ad revenue with Google and Facebook have criticized the tech giants for not paying for the news content that is featured and shared on their platforms. Dow Jones parent

News Corp

was among the most vocal critics.

The Journal gets the bulk of the Dow Jones payments, which are made up mostly of cash but also include other forms of compensation, such as credits for marketing on Facebook, according to people familiar with the matter. The deal encompasses other Dow Jones publications as well as the New York Post, which is owned by News Corp.

Many other U.S. news publishers are getting payments from Facebook to have their content featured in its news tab, but they only get a fraction of the sums paid to the Washington Post, the New York Times and Dow Jones, according to people familiar with the matter. Facebook is paying more for access to paywalled content, while publishers whose stories are accessible for free are getting less money, a person familiar with the deals said. The smaller deals usually are for less than $3 million a year, the people said.

Dow Jones, the New York Times and the Washington Post declined to comment. The Times last year had revenue of $2.1 billion, while Dow Jones reported $1.7 billion in revenue for its last fiscal year, which ended June 30, 2021.

Facebook announced the launch of Facebook News—which users can find as a tab on the mobile app or website, similar to the Facebook Watch tab for video—in the fall of 2019, on the heels of widespread criticism about the impact that Facebook and Google’s growing share of the digital ad market was having on news organizations—particularly local ones. By 2018, Facebook and Google were getting 77% of the digital advertising revenue in local markets, and 1,800 U.S. newspapers had closed down since 2004.

The launch of the News tab was a crowning achievement for Ms. Brown, whom Facebook hired to improve its relationships with publishers, according to people familiar with the matter.

Facebook first rolled out the product in the U.S., offering upfront payments to news organizations. It expanded it to the U.K., Germany and Australia in 2021, and France this year.

All the while, Facebook was facing a continuing regulatory onslaught around the world. Regulators in the European Union, France, the U.K., Australia and the U.S. took steps aimed at forcing the platforms such as Google and Facebook to pay publishers for news content available on their services. Facebook opposed a law that passed in Australia so vehemently that it moved to block the publication of any news story on its platform in the country. In the process, it also ended up shutting down the Facebook pages of many of Australia’s health, charity and emergency services for five days—a move that whistleblowers allege was deliberate and that Facebook described as an accident.

This spring, a revamped version of the U.S. legislation aimed at forcing the platforms to negotiate payment with publishers began circling in Congress, this time with a provision that would require the platforms to engage in baseball-style, “final offer” arbitration—the same measure that prompted Facebook to pull news in Australia. Canada, meanwhile, recently proposed a law modeled on Australia’s.

Facebook’s News Content

Read more coverage of the social-media giant’s relationship with publishers, selected by the editors:

Write to Alexandra Bruell at alexandra.bruell@wsj.com and Keach Hagey at keach.hagey@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Source link

Tags: DealsFacebookloseMillionsNewsPaymentsPublishersRethinksStand
Share76Tweet47
Previous Post

‘The metaverse will empower human beings’, declares Qatar Airways

Next Post

Alibaba Cloud launches NFT solution… then quickly memory holes it

Related Posts

AWS Executive Asked Staff to Recruit Laid Off Meta Employees

AWS Executive Asked Staff to Recruit Laid Off Meta Employees

2026-06-10
0

Amazon wants Meta's castoffs.Months after Amazon's own job cuts, Amazon Web Services' marketing chief asked employees to recruit recently laid...

A Top Metaverse Exec Quietly Left Four Months Ago

A Top Metaverse Exec Quietly Left Four Months Ago

2026-06-03
0

Meta's metaverse division has a new leader — again.The latest executive shuffle inside Reality Labs comes as Meta continues to...

Anthropic Eyes an IPO as Big Tech’s AI Cash Crunch Comes for Wall Street

Anthropic Eyes an IPO as Big Tech’s AI Cash Crunch Comes for Wall Street

2026-06-01
0

The artificial intelligence developer Anthropic took a tentative first step Monday toward becoming a publicly traded company, a move that...

Meta Copies Snapchat’s Homework Again With ‘Plus’ Features for Instagram and Facebook

Meta Copies Snapchat’s Homework Again With ‘Plus’ Features for Instagram and Facebook

2026-05-28
0

Meta announced new upcoming subscription plans for Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp this week. Instagram isn’t going behind a paywall, no....

Coming Soon to a Roblox Game Near You: Strange AI-Generated Machines and Creatures

Coming Soon to a Roblox Game Near You: Strange AI-Generated Machines and Creatures

2026-05-28
0

Imagine you're playing a racing game and you're AI-generating the car you'll use. Or a sandbox battle where you're making...

Load More

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Top 5 Biggest Metaverse Crypto Projects for 2022

Top 5 Biggest Metaverse Crypto Projects for 2022

2022-01-16
Why Are Photographic Avatars Vital for Work in the Metaverse?

Why Are Photographic Avatars Vital for Work in the Metaverse?

2022-01-02
YouTube’s Primetime Channels bring streaming movies and TV into the YouTube app

YouTube’s Primetime Channels bring streaming movies and TV into the YouTube app

2022-11-01

Gateway to the Metaverse | Monthly Memos from Hrish Lotlikar

2022-01-04
Someone paid 450k to be Snoop Dogg’s virtual neighbour

Someone paid 450k to be Snoop Dogg’s virtual neighbour

0
Metaverse Land On Solana Is Also Gaining Value Rapidly

Metaverse Land On Solana Is Also Gaining Value Rapidly

0
Snoop Dogg Sandbox Sale Goes Live Today!

Snoop Dogg Sandbox Sale Goes Live Today!

0
Metaverse Land Sales Are Flying

Metaverse Land Sales Are Flying

0
AWS Executive Asked Staff to Recruit Laid Off Meta Employees

AWS Executive Asked Staff to Recruit Laid Off Meta Employees

2026-06-10
A Top Metaverse Exec Quietly Left Four Months Ago

A Top Metaverse Exec Quietly Left Four Months Ago

2026-06-03
Anthropic Eyes an IPO as Big Tech’s AI Cash Crunch Comes for Wall Street

Anthropic Eyes an IPO as Big Tech’s AI Cash Crunch Comes for Wall Street

2026-06-01
Meta Copies Snapchat’s Homework Again With ‘Plus’ Features for Instagram and Facebook

Meta Copies Snapchat’s Homework Again With ‘Plus’ Features for Instagram and Facebook

2026-05-28

Metaverse News Outlet

Our mission is to bring you the latest metaverse news and help you learn about the metaverse. It doesn't matter if you're a metaverse beginner or a metaverse noob, we've got you covered. Be sure to check out our Learning Zone to find out how you can join the metaverse if you want to get involved.

Categories

  • Cryptocurrency and NFT
  • Latest News
  • Learning Zone
  • Virtual Worlds

Recent Posts

  • AWS Executive Asked Staff to Recruit Laid Off Meta Employees
  • A Top Metaverse Exec Quietly Left Four Months Ago
  • Anthropic Eyes an IPO as Big Tech’s AI Cash Crunch Comes for Wall Street

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Cryptocurrency and NFT
  • Virtual Worlds
  • Learning Zone
  • Videos
    • News
    • Learn
  • FAQ
  • Directory

© 2018 Metaverse News Outlet.