Publishers are facing a challenging landscape as they await a new wave of licensing deals with artificial intelligence companies. Initial agreements suggested a potential for compensation for the journalism that supports much of AI large language models. However, optimism for a thriving licensing market appears dim as the industry heads toward 2026.
The crux of the matter lies in the integration of Google’s search crawler with its AI-training processes. Historically, publishers could operate under the assumption that the rules governing search indexing and AI model training were distinct. This is no longer the case.
Google has effectively tied access to its model training with visibility in its search results. For publishers, the clear message is that to drive traffic, their content must be available for AI ingestion. This interlinking creates an environment where competing AI companies perceive little incentive to engage in paid licensing, especially when Google’s model allows them to access the same content for free.
This situation is shaping the industry’s outlook for 2026. It is not so much a matter of publishers being overly accommodating or fragmented in their negotiations; rather, the fundamental structure of the market has shifted. As long as participating in search requires participation in training, the value of data effectively approaches zero.
For years, publishers relied on the robots.txt protocol to delineate between content meant for indexing and that intended for training. While not foolproof, it offered some assurance that publishers could manage their content’s visibility. Now, the intertwining of these workflows has rendered this boundary ineffective. The choice becomes stark: total visibility or total exclusion, a dilemma that most publishers cannot afford.
This loss of operational boundaries undermines the scarcity essential for a viable licensing market. While some publishers may still enter into limited partnerships with AI companies, these agreements are unlikely to create a substantial market. Such deals may generate headlines or provide momentary relief for participating publishers, but they do not represent a scalable solution that addresses the broader economic challenges faced by the industry.
As the industry approaches 2026, the landscape suggests that publishers will need to abandon their hopes for significant licensing revenue. Without a distinct separation of Google’s crawlers, there will be no opportunity for price discovery, competitive tension, or motivation for AI companies to invest in robust licensing agreements. While regulatory changes could one day force a division of these operations, such developments are not expected in the near term.
In this context, the companies that will thrive are those that pivot their focus away from seeking licensing fees. Instead, they will invest in areas where they maintain control: engaging directly with audiences, developing owned platforms, leveraging first-party data, hosting events, and creating structured content feeds designed for future AI systems that may require licensed inputs.
As of now, the pivotal question that looms over the future of AI licensing is straightforward: Has Google split its crawlers? As it stands, the answer remains no.
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