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Google signs deal with AP to deliver up-to-date news through its Gemini AI chatbot

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Google signs deal with AP to deliver up-to-date news through its Gemini AI chatbot
News

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Google signs deal with AP to deliver up-to-date news through its Gemini AI chatbot

2025-01-16 07:08 Last Updated At:07:11

Google says its artificial intelligence chatbot Gemini will deliver up-to-date news from The Associated Press in the tech giant's first such deal with a news publisher.

Google announced the deal in a blog post Wednesday, saying that AP “will now deliver a feed of real-time information to help further enhance the usefulness of results displayed in the Gemini app.”

AP's chief revenue officer, Kristin Heitmann, said it is part of a longstanding relationship with the search giant “based on working together to provide timely, accurate news and information to global audiences.”

"We are pleased Google recognizes the value of AP’s journalism as well as our commitment to nonpartisan reporting, in the development of its generative AI products,” Heitmann said in a written statement.

Neither company has disclosed how much Google will pay AP for the content. Google declined further comment on how it would present information from AP’s journalism and whether it would credit the news organization or link back to the original articles.

Gemini, formerly known as Bard, has been Google's answer to the demand for generative AI tools that can compose documents, generate images, help program code or perform other work.

AP has sought to diversify its revenue stream in recent years and in 2023 signed a deal with OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT, enabling the AI company to license AP's archive of news stories to train future versions of its AI systems. The financial terms of that deal were also not disclosed, but it sparked an increasing number of similar partnerships between OpenAI and news organizations around the world.

At the same time, news organizations have expressed concerns about AI companies using their material without permission — or payment — and then unfairly competing with them for advertising revenue that comes when people use a search engine or click on a news website. The New York Times and other outlets have sued OpenAI and other AI companies for copyright infringement and, on Tuesday, presented their arguments before a New York federal judge.

Tech companies have argued that freely taking publicly available text from the internet to teach their AI models constitutes a “fair use” under U.S. copyright laws. But faced with legal challenges and a technology that is prone to spouting errors known as hallucinations, AI companies have also sought to license high-quality data sources to improve the performance of their products.

Publishers are at a disadvantage as tech companies integrate AI-generated summaries of information into an array of online services, but such deals are also beneficial in giving news outlets much-needed revenue and improving the overall quality of information that people are seeing online, said Alex Mahadevan, director of The Poynter Institute’s Mediawise, a digital media literacy initiative.

“You either sign a deal with an AI company and work with them and kind of take what they offer for all of your hard work, all of your articles, all of your data, or you fight, the way that The New York Times and others are trying to do in court,” he said.

The AP prides itself on being an unbiased news source and offers news stories, pictures, video, audio and interactive content direct to consumers via the website APNews.com. But the bulk of its business comes from selling its journalism to organizations that use it.

The AP has experienced a precipitous loss in revenue from newspaper customers, including losing Gannett and McClatchy -- two of the largest traditional U.S. newspaper publishers -- last year. The AP has increasingly secured other sources of revenue, including philanthropic funding, but is still hurt by the news industry’s overall woes.

“The AP has copious amounts of data and text, which are the equivalent of gold in terms of training advanced generative AI models,” said Sarah Kreps, a professor and director of Cornell University's Tech Policy Institute. While such deals might help offset some revenue losses, they also present dangers.

“By outsourcing their value to tech companies, news outlets may cede control over how their work is used and monetized,” Kreps said by email. “Instead of building stronger, direct relationships with readers, they risk becoming suppliers of raw material for platforms that then commodify and repurpose their journalism.”

FILE - In this Oct. 17, 2012 file photo, a Google logo is shown at Google offices in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, file)

FILE - In this Oct. 17, 2012 file photo, a Google logo is shown at Google offices in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, file)

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Apartment building collapses in central Turkey, killing 1 woman

2025-01-25 17:51 Last Updated At:18:00

ISTANBUL (AP) — Rescuers pulled the body of a 23-year-old woman from under a collapsed apartment building in central Turkey on Saturday, state-run media said, as efforts continued to find a final person, believed to be her husband.

Three others were retrieved from the wreckage and being treated in a hospital, Anadolu Agency reported.

The collapse comes amid renewed focus on building safety following the deaths of 78 people in a fire Tuesday that ripped through a 12-story hotel at a ski resort in northwestern Turkey. Investigators are examining whether proper fire prevention measures were in place.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on Saturday that 79 people were registered as living in the four-story apartment block in the city of Konya, some 260 kilometers (160 miles) south of the capital Ankara.

Earlier, Yerlikaya said the last two people remaining under the debris were Syrian nationals. He added that the cause of the building collapse was not immediately known. “If there is a fault, negligence or anything else, we will learn it together,” he told journalists.

TV images showed emergency workers sifting through a large pile of rubble Saturday morning following the building’s collapse Friday evening. Anadolu Agency reported that four people were detained as part of the investigation.

The second anniversary of an earthquake that hit southern Turkey and north Syria, killing more than 59,000, is just two weeks away. The high death toll at the time was due in part to building safety regulations being ignored.

In 2004, a 12-story apartment building collapsed in Konya, claiming the lives of 92 people and injuring some 30 others. Structural flaws and negligence were blamed for the collapse.

Firefighters work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Firefighters work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

Emergency and rescue team members work in the aftermath of a building that collapsed in the city of Konya, central Turkey, early Saturday, Jan. 25, 2025. (Ugur Yildirim/Dia Photo via AP)

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