Skip to main content

EU Copyright Directive

See All Stories

Google urges EU to ‘reduce legal uncertainty’ in finalized Copyright Directive

Google Search no news headlines Europe

Since last year, Google has been a vocal opponent of the European Union’s Copyright Directive. While the company recognizes the need for legal modernization, it argues that there are unintended consequences for the publishers and other parties that the EU is trying to help. Google yesterday shared its response to the finalized text ahead of a broader vote.


Expand
Expanding
Close

Google reveals 45% traffic decline to news sites w/ snippet-less Search results due to EU’s Article 11

Google Search no news headlines Europe

Last month, Google tested the impact of Search news results that lacked snippets, headlines, and images to comply with the European Union’s proposed Article 11. Ahead of the Copyright Directive being finalized, the company shared how news publishers could see a 45% reduction in traffic.


Expand
Expanding
Close

Google Search testing news results with no snippets, headlines, images following Europe’s Article 11

Google Search no news headlines Europe

Since the European Union Copyright Directive was introduced last year, Google and YouTube have been lobbying against it by enlisting creators and users. Ahead of finalized language for Article 11 and 13 this month, Google Search is testing possible responses to the “link tax.”


Expand
Expanding
Close

Google could shutdown Google News in Europe over Article 11 ‘link tax’

Google News

In recent weeks, the European Union’s Copyright Directive has come under immense online scrutiny, with Article 13 possibly resulting in YouTube blocking some videos in the continent. However, Article 11 — dubbed a “link tax” — has potentially equal ramifications, with Google News possibly shutting down as a result.


Expand
Expanding
Close

YouTube addresses Article 13, says EU copyright plan may lead to blocked access

YouTube logo

The EU’s copyright directive, Article 13 has come under scrutiny yet again from national and international media. Now an official response from YouTube was recently published on the official YouTube Creator Blog. In the post, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki pushed back against these proposed European copyright legislation changes.


Expand
Expanding
Close