Leading French media sue X over content payments

(FILES) (COMBO) This file combination image of two pictures created on October 10, 2023, shows (L) SpaceX, Twitter and electric car maker Tesla CEO Elon Musk during his visit at the Vivatech technology startups and innovation fair in Paris on June 16, 2023, and (R) the new Twitter logo rebranded as X, pictured on a screen in Paris on July 24, 2023. – The social media site X, formerly known as Twitter, announced October 17, 2023 that it has begun charging new users in New Zealand and the Philippines to use basic features like posting messages. (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD / AFP) / NO USE AFTER OCTOBER 28, 2023 02:00:33 GMT

Several leading French media groups said Tuesday that they are suing social media platform X, accusing it of running their content without payment.

Newspapers including Le Figaro, Les Echos, Le Parisien, Le Monde, Courrier International, Huffington Post, and Le Nouvel Obs said in a statement that they were launching joint action against the social media company run by US billionaire Elon Musk.

AFP last week sued X over the same issue and a court hearing has been set for May 15, 2025, according to the agency’s management.

The French media groups accuse the site formerly known as Twitter of violating so-called neighbouring rights, which under a European directive adopted into French law are due when social media platforms republish news content.

The newspapers, as well as AFP, had already asked for an emergency injunction against X, which they accuse of not negotiating.

On May 24, a Paris tribunal agreed with the media companies, and gave X two months to provide commercial data that would allow them to assess the income it earns from their content.

The social media site “has not yet complied” with this decision, “demonstrating its continued intent to avoid its legal obligations”, the newspapers said, justifying their latest suit.

Last week, around 50 other mainly regional French media groups said they had filed legal action against Microsoft, another US digital giant.

They are claiming several million euros in a series of summons filed with Paris courts under the charge of “counterfeiting”.

The issue of neighbouring rights has poisoned relations between the French press and Internet companies for the past five years.

In 2021, agreements were signed with Meta, owner of Facebook, and in 2022 with Google. Some were framework agreements, and others individual arrangements.

But last March, matters again took a confrontational turn when the French Competition Authority fined Google 250 million euros ($265 million), accusing it of failing to meet some of its commitments made in 2022.

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