Google Started Rewriting News Headlines. Publishers Say It's Setting a Dangerous Precedent
Google's creeping editorial role is alarming publishers and costing them more than just traffic. (1/2) 17 HOURS AGO
(JUST CALL GOOGLE WHAT it IS, “BIG BROTHER” AND ITS ALWAYS GETTING WORSE, ALONG WITH OTHER LARGE CORPORATIONS)
The relationship between Google and news publishers has historically been an uneasy one, as the early architecture of the web enabled both to flourish but only by aligning their mutual self-interests. Publishers produced content, Google used it to answer user queries, and outlets monetized those visits with advertising.
=But the fraught dynamic. has only worsened in recent years, as changes to the search engine have decreased the volume of referral traffic it sends to publishers. Similarly, the advent of artificial intelligence has recast the role Google plays on the web, transforming it from a librarian into a curator.
On Friday, thisevolution marked another grim milestone. Building on the foundation of AI Overviews, which summarize publishers’ contentinto brief snippets, the search engine has now begun testing a new feature in whichit changes the headlines of published articles themselves.
Although a spokesperson for Google emphasized the “limited scope of the experiment”, for many publishers itrepresents the crossing of a symbolic Rubicon.
Summarizing a story is one thing; rewriting its headline, without permission or notification, feels decidedly like another.
Tobetter understand the impasse, ADWEEK spoke with executives at five media outlets.Many were outraged by the lack of communication, several were upset with what they interpreted as Googlemaking a unilateral editorial decision, but a few were cautiously optimistic that such a trial could ultimately benefit publishers, if carried out properly. (That’s false hope, Google will never do things for the creators, it more about control and money for them. How did our government approve Mega Giant Corporations when they were intentionally broken up for too much power etc. In the mid 1,900s?)
The consent problem
Every media executive agreed: The original sin of thisparticular experimentwas alack of communication, consent, or even basic notification.
Even a charitable interpretation of the trial, premisedon the idea that Google is optimizing these headlines to better serve its users and publisher partners,still would not excuse a lack of cooperation, according to one of the executives. The oversight isparticularly glaring given that the changes made are to the editorial content itself.(anyone thinking Google made a mistake of oversight, have no idea how truly bad they are and this is. They are picking winners and losers, if they don’t like the content they make the creators change much more biased. -Accelerating loss of viewership.)
“This isanother overreachby Google taking liberties with contentwithout permission,” one media executive told ADWEEK. “It is hard to understand why Google feels they have the right to do this.”(they must be naive to make a statement like that!)
A journalism, not business, issue
Several executives were emphatic that headlines are not interchangeable with other page elements: theyrepresent editorial judgmentandchanging them without disclosure creates real downstream risk.
“We don’t think of headlines as a cosmetic detail,”one media executive said. “If Google rewrites headlines,they’re not justorganizing the web;they’re intervening in our journalism.” Similarly, if a rewritten headline turns out to be inaccurate or misleading, readers are likely to hold the publisher responsible.
“If we’re not controlling that, that seems risky.” Devin Emery, president at Morning Brew, pointed to a stark contrast in the way Google treats the headlines of text-based content versus those of its video creators on YouTube.
On YouTube, the platform has recently offeredcreators new tools that allow them to more finely tune their headlines, an acknowledgement of the importance of headlines as both communication tools and brand-building devices. When it comes to text content, however, Google gives the impression thatsuch material is a commodity—that its voice or style are irrelevant compared to its contents. “It’s interesting to see that text and video are being treated differently,” Emery said.“You’re basically reliant on Google saying user satisfaction is up. There are no details on what that means.”
The slippery slope
Several executives said the headline experiment isconcerning less for what it is than for what it might become and what could follow.==
https://www.adweek.com/media/google-is-rewriting-story-headlines-publishers-are-concerned/