Posts Tagged ‘News Corp.’

News Corp. to charge for online content

Rupert Murdoch wants to try to cancel the free lunch online readers enjoy while eating away at his company’s, News Corp.’s, profits.

As quoted in his paper, the New York Post:

“Quality journalism is not cheap,” he said. “A newspaper that gives away its content is simply cannibalizing its ability to produce good reporting.”

“We intend to charge for all news Web sites,” Murdoch said, referring not only to the online versions of newspapers such as The Wall Street Journal, The London Sun and The Post, but also to news-related Web sites like those of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network. Murdoch added that he expects to begin charging for news content online sometime during this fiscal year.

Murdoch has also lost faith in the ad-supported broadcasting model, and is looking to generate revenue from cable companies and ultimately end users for watching programming from his Fox TV network. Meanwhile, the article mentions that the industry is headed to a showdown between the content creators like News Corp. and the aggregators such as Google and Yahoo! who argue that their services enhances the originating brands.

There are plenty of naysayers out there that claim that only select brands like the Wall Street Journal are successful in charging for content, but there continues to be a dearth of any better ideas that pay for professional journalism.

The Facebook phenomenon

For a few years now I had been hearing about Facebook, the social networking system based on geographic and school-based networks. I had always heard it contrasted with MySpace, the original networking system that now seems like the Wild Wild West.

Because of obvious privacy issues, I had been very wary of social networking sites. But as my children have grown older and wished to connect with their friends via this new technology, I’ve walked with them with my eyes wide open.

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