Rebekah Brooks Resigns From News Corp.

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By Nat Ives on AdAge, July 15 – Days after shutting down its 168-year-old News of the World and abandoning its $12 billion attempt to buy the rest of satellite giant British Sky Broadcasting, News Corp. has absorbed another consequence of its phone hacking scandal by accepting the resignation of Rebekah Brooks, CEO of its British newspapers division.

Ms. Brooks was editor at News of the World during much of the phone hacking that has enraged Britain, but has said she knew nothing about any of it. News Corp. chairman-CEO Rupert Murdoch had stood by her even as he walked away from the paper, its 200 employees and, most recently, the BSkyB deal.

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Misdiagnosed: Why Newspapers will Build Bad Business Models

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By Brad King, Assistant Professor, Ball State University

Rupert Murdoch raised quite a stir in the publishing world when he announced last month that he would, in the near future, remove his company’s news content from Google. His reasoning: Google is stealing, making money off headlines, decks and images, which ultimately hurts his bottom line since people aren’t viewing that content on his company’s sites.

In December, the news industry fired another salvo when Murdoch’s News Corp. and four other media conglomerates announced the formation of a joint venture to develop a digital publishing platform for the Web and the emerging e-Reader market. This followed the Hearst Corp., one of the companies involved in Murdoch’s conglomerate, attempting to push its Skiff e-Reader software to e-Reader devices in 2010.

That Google — and the rest of the technology world — didn’t blink any of these ideas is telling. Google, in fact, quickly unveiled an easy solution that would allow any publisher to remove its content immediately from search. So far, none have. [Read more...]