Google has unveiled a service called Fast Flip to let users consume news more quickly and to boost the flagging fortunes of the news industry.
The product is designed to mirror the way readers flick through magazines and newspapers.
Google has teamed up with more than 30 providers such as the BBC to provide what it calls a new reading experience.
The search giant was recently called a parasite for making money aggregating content it did not create.
"I don't believe we are part of the problem. I believe we are part of the solution," Google's vice-president of search, Marissa Mayer, told BBC News.
"We have tried to build platforms and tools that build a healthy, rich eco-system online that is supportive of content. This is a new way of looking at content."
Earlier this year, Wall Street Journal chief Robert Thomson called the search company and other aggregators such as Yahoo "parasites or tech tapeworms in the intestines of the internet".
The news industry has been struggling with how to broaden the size of its online audience and how to make money from content it has long given away free.
Last month, media mogul Rupert Murdoch said he hoped all of his major newspapers would be charging for online content by the end of June next year.
Preferences
Fast Flip imitates a conventional print publication by offering screenshots of the web pages containing relevant articles.
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The stories are organised following a number of different criteria. For example, readers will be offered articles that have been popular all day, that reflect their personal preference or that have been recommended by friends.
Users who want to dig deeper into the story can click through to the publisher's website.
To make money, Fast Flip also serves up contextual adverts around the screenshots.
Publishers who have signed up to provide content to the service will share in that revenue; that was proof, said Ms Mayer, that Google was keen to help the industry at a time when it was clearly struggling.
"We are excited to team with publishers and look at a new possibility for how people might consume news online and how to monetise it," said Ms Mayer.