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Editor&Publisher (via AP): Murdoch tells ‘cynics’ that newspapers will survive

November 18th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Judith Townend in Editors' pick
It's widely reported, but worth flagging up for those who haven't seen coverage. AP reports: Rupert Murdoch has said that doomsayers 'who are predicting the internet will kill off newspapers are 'misguided cynics' who fail to grasp that the online world is potentially a huge new market of information-hungry consumers.' Full story...

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MediaGuardian: Murdoch says online WSJ and Dow Jones subscriptions could go up

September 18th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick
Online subscription revenues at the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones could go up by $300m every year for up to three years, according to Rupert Murdoch. Full story...

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Vanity Fair: Rupert Murdoch interviewed by Michael Wolff

September 3rd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick
An extract from Michael Wolff's forthcoming book, The Man Who Owns the News, in October's Vanity Fair, which, among other revelations, details how he acted as a peace broker between Barack Obama and his Fox News Network. Full story...

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NYTimes.com: Murdoch’s New York Post in talks with rival The Daily News

July 16th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Laura Oliver in Editors' pick, Newspapers

Representatives of the Post and News have been discussing ways to combine certain ‘business functions’ of the two titles, in particular distribution and printing operations.

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Reuters: Murdoch’s online operation to miss ambitious targets

May 8th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Oliver Luft in Editors' pick

The stressed state of the US economy is causing advertising budgets to shrink - causing News Corp to miss its ambitious online revenue target of one billion dollars by ten per cent, Rupert Murdoch said yesterday.

Reuters reported that the media tycoon claimed Fox Interactive Media - which runs the online part of his US empire, including MySpace - will however have “well over” $1 billion in revenue in the 2009 financial year.

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WSJ.com to open up some premium content

January 11th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted by Oliver Luft in Online Journalism

The WSJ.com is removing the paywall to some of its premium paid-for editorials, commentary and opinion pieces.

The OpinionJournal site, which used to offer for free certain cherry-picked editorials and new web-only content, will now be ‘offering all of our editorials and op-eds, video interviews and commentary’.

According to the Guardian, the move could be a precursor to new owner Rupert Murdoch scrapping the subscription funding model that currently exists as it plans to launch a new free access website for all its editorials, op-ed pieces, video interviews and commentary.

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@BtPW: 120,000 contributions and 3 million views of single Madeleine McCann story thread

November 8th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted by Oliver Luft in Online Journalism

Danny Dagan, head of online communities with News Group, told the Beyond the Printed Word conference that a single discussion thread about Madeleine McCann overseen by his moderation team has taken over 120,000 contributions and been viewed over three million times.

Attesting to the success of News Group’s reader community areas, Dagan - whose team of seven moderators and one manager oversee the communities for Sun Online, thelondonpaper and the News of the World - told delegates that he had developed a 152-page moderation policy book that his team is tested on every three months (bonuses depend on knowledge of it, he added.)

The policy is to assure the smooth running of the reader discussion area and to lessen the threat of legal action from rouge posts and when discussions turn ugly.

As an example, Dagan said that when the tide of opinion turned against the McCanns his team were removing up to 500 comments a day.

The policy book was developed, he said, from the responses News Group’s team of lawyers to 100 ‘borderline’ pieces of user-generated content (UGC) submitted to its newspaper sites.

Industry norms, he added, of having to remove a piece of unsuitable content within 24 weekday hours were massively surpassed.

He told delegates that his team was committed to removing unsuitable content within 15 minutes. Although, he added, the average time between complaint and removal was two to three minutes.

He added that moderation was made for both inappropriate content and from an editorial perspective, also for ‘brand protection’ (which basically means if the Sun, the moderators or Rupert Murdoch get slagged off too much).

So heavy traffic and a fabulous number of users of MySun then Danny? Oh yes, but he remained steadfastly tight-lipped on just how many people had signed up.

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