Tag Archives: news corp

MySpace May Be After Flixster

Over the past several months, MySpace has become much more formidable thanks to some new features, a deal with a record label, and a couple of acquisitions. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amazon, digital entertainment, imdb, kara swisher, movies, music label, news corp, partnership deal, situation, social-networking | Leave a comment

Minds of the Media Gather to Discuss Future of News

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is hosting a 2-day workshop on "Journalism and the Internet Age" today and tomorrow. Featured at the event are a number of high profile media executives and gurus. The cast ranges from News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch to Huffington Post co-founder Arianna Huffington. The event appears to be designed to present all possible angles regarding the state of the news industry and the web's role, as well as the government's role, if any. Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land, who is appearing on a panel at the event himself, has a liveblog running, covering much of the discussion (and there is a lot of it), providing a good source for actual quotes. The newspaper industry is obviously struggling right now, and a common theme discussed throughout the workshop has been that the effects of the recession may be skewing the long term view. In other words, maybe it's not really as bad as it seems right now. That said, publications clearly have to adapt to the online lifestyles of readers, whether that means the death of print newspapers or not. Let's look at comments made by Murdoch and Huffington, because they basically represent opposing sides of the spectrum on a number of sub-topics to this discussion (Although to be fair, it's probably not as black and white as that. There is certainly a lot of gray area in the discussion, which has been going on for years). Murdoch says three things have to happen: media companies have to deliver the news consumers want in ways that meet their lifestyles and must innovate like never before, they have to convince consumers that good journalism isn't free, and the government needs to "clear obstacles." Murdoch goes on to discuss other related topics, including that of fair use. He rips aggregators, calling aggregation "wholesale theft." Huffington , whose site is largely known for aggregating content, says Murdoch is confusing aggregation with theft, but says they link to the Wall Street Journal every day and never get a complaint. She says that if it was wrong, they'd have heard about it. She also says aggregation is part of the web's "DNA" and that Murdoch plays both sides, noting that some of Murdoch's own sites also aggregate or "steal" content. Huffington also discusses things like social and collaborative news, and the concept of citizen journalism. There are many other speakers and opinions being voiced at the FTC's event, and Sullivan's liveblog captures a great deal of them. It will be interesting to see if the event leads to any significant progress in the ongoing discussion. On a related note, Google has posted about the ways it is focusing on helping news publishers gain traffic, engage audiences, and increase revenue. Related Articles: > Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged angles, internet age, media executives, news corp, online, rupert murdoch, search, search-engine, words | Leave a comment

Two More Publishers Talk About Blocking Google

A couple of major publishers are siding with (or at least edging towards) Rupert Murdoch in the News Corp./Google content dispute. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged bensinger, blocking-news, blocking-search, google-search, microsoft, news corp, outside-the-pay, president, president-james, rupert murdoch, search engines, street, traffic, vice president james, wall street journal | Leave a comment

The Traffic News Corp. Would Lose Without Google

As you may know, Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and CEO of News Corp., is saying he may block search engines from accessing the organization's content. He expressed this notion in a recent interview. If Murdoch were to act upon this, it would mean theoretically that you would no longer be able to find Wall Street Journal, New York Post, etc. content on Google. Of course that would be in a world where scraped content isn't frequently crawled by search engines. If Murdoch were to pull all of the original content, he would risk all of his content just being found on other sites through Google (or Yahoo or Bing or wherever). The reality is that illegal scraping will continue to exist, and search engines aren't perfect. There is a great chance that they will still crawl the content, without even knowing it was originally produced by News Corp. properties. With News Corp.'s content in the search engines, at least the engines will be able to place that content higher in results where it would be more likley to drown out the scraped versions. This week, a Google spokesman told Emma Barnett at the Telegraph, "Google News and web search are a tremendous source of promotion for news organisations, sending them about 100,000 clicks every minute." and... "If publishers want their content to be removed from Google News specifically all they need to do is tell us." So in other words, Google is fine with Murdoch pulling out . News Corp.'s the one that stands to lose more from that. Experian Hitwise shared some rather interesting data with WebProNews: - On a weekly basis Google and Google news are the top traffic providers for WSJ.com account for over 25% of WSJ.com's traffic. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged chairman, google web, google-news, news corp, people, publishing, rupert murdoch, search engines, street, wall street, webpronews, yahoo | Leave a comment