Google Gives In, AFP Becomes Less Relevant

from the AFP-who? dept

Following AFP’s somewhat brain-dead decision to sue Google for daring to link to AFP published stories around the web, Google has graciously started removing all links to any AFP published story. Of course, the real loser in all of this is AFP, who in one bizarre move has made itself ridiculously less relevant and useful to the world of folks who spread the news. It will be harder for people to find AFP news, and AFP will suffer for it. They’ve just cut off one of the best marketing channels they had for no clear reason at all. Why publish online at all if you’re not going to allow the biggest driver of traffic to link to you?


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Comments on “Google Gives In, AFP Becomes Less Relevant”

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4 Comments
Raymond Chen (user link) says:

Because that's not where they make their money

AFP is not a web-based business. Eyeballs and traffic and brand awareness are irrelevant. People don’t say, “I prefer the Tribune over the Inquirer because the Tribune uses AFP.” Their business is selling content to newspapers, and their marketing targets newspaper editors, not the Google-news reader.

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Because that's not where they make their money

But if more people see AFP based news stories, then it reflects better on the newspapers who buy their stories — increasing their value.

Taking themselves out of the game is a bad idea.

Besides, this is just trying to hold back the tide, and refusing to adjust their business model for the changing times.

digifool (user link) says:

Re: Re: Because that's not where they make their money

If BestNetTech bought content from AFP and BestNetTech was getting less traffic from Google because it was going direct to AFP. I suggest that BestNetTech might get upset and stop buying content from AFP. If the AFP was not indexed by Google then the content provided by AFP but distributed by BestNetTech is more likely to get more traffic.
At the end of the day AFP make money from selling their content to content providers. So, I would have thought that for them its better business that the content providers get the traffic rather than AFP.
I’d say they just got some customers back onside and that the business model remains intact.

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