Use of their content without paying: Le Figaro, Le Monde and Le Parisien take the X platform, owned by Elon Musk, to court in

Use of their content without paying: Le Figaro, Le Monde and Le Parisien take the X platform, owned by Elon Musk, to court in
Use of their content without paying: Le Figaro, Le Monde and Le Parisien take the X platform, owned by Elon Musk, to court in France

The hatchet has been dug up in the neighboring rights issue in : after the regional press against Microsoft, several other newspapers, including Le Figaro, The World et The Parisianas well as the AFP, are suing the social network X (formerly Twitter), accused of using their content without paying.

Agence France-Presse summoned X to the merits last week, and a hearing at the court was set for May 15, 2025, we learned from its management.

The other action in progress, announced Tuesday in a press release, is carried out jointly by The Echoes et The Parisian (which belong to the group of the same name), the group The World (The World, Telerama, International Mail, The Huffington Post, The New Obs and Malesherbes Publications, publisher of The life) et Le Figaro.

They are also suing the social network, owned by American billionaire Elon Musk, before the Paris judicial court.

Before this action on the merits, these newspapers, as well as the AFP for its part, had summoned X and its French subsidiary for summary proceedings (an emergency procedure), accusing it of not wanting to negotiate.

On May 24, the summary judge of the Paris judicial court ruled in their favor. He ordered the social network to provide them, within two months, with a series of commercial data allowing them to assess the income it earns from their content.

X/Twitter “has (…) not complied” with this decision until now, “thus demonstrating its invariable desire to evade its legal obligations”, the newspapers denounced to justify their new legal action .

Asked by AFP, X’s lawyer did not comment.

“Additional step”

Rights related to copyright were established for digital platforms by a 2019 European directive. They allow newspapers, magazines or press agencies to be remunerated when their content is reused by digital giants.

“A conviction of Twitter (…) within the framework of this new procedure on the merits would constitute an additional step in the implementation of the legal provisions on neighboring rights”, estimated the newspapers which are pursuing X. Active support of Donald Trump , elected President of the United States for the second time, Elon Musk is frequently accused of promoting disinformation on X, where he poses as an adversary of the media.

Before this action against X, around fifty other French press publishers, mainly regional, announced on November 8 that they had filed legal action against the American giant Microsoft.

In total, several million euros are claimed by securities of groups such as Ouest-France or Ebra, in a series of summons filed with the Paris judicial court for “counterfeiting”.

Artificial intelligence

This long-term issue of neighboring rights has poisoned relations between the French press and the internet giants for five years.

However, it experienced a lull in 2021: after a bitter battle, agreements were signed from October 2021 with Meta, owner of Facebook, and from March 2022 with Google.

Some were framework agreements concluded with collective groups of newspapers, the members of which were then each able to negotiate directly with the platforms. Others were individual agreements.

The framework agreements are currently being renegotiated.

But last March, the matter once again took a conflicting turn: the Competition Authority imposed a fine of 250 million euros on Google, accusing it of not having respected some of the commitments made in 2022.

“Unlike Google and Meta, X/Twitter has (…) never agreed to open negotiations with French press publishers in order to respect the legal framework on copyright and related rights, and this despite several months of procedures followed by amicable follow-ups”, underlined the newspapers which are suing their content, with the rise of artificial intelligence programs (AI).

In September, OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, refused group negotiations with two French press organizations to use the content of the 800 titles they represent for a fee.

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