murdoch
3 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
-
Introducing the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio
Check out this webcast to learn more about the New VMware Management Solution Portfolio.
-
Murdoch's 'wife' fools Twitter: If its verification process is secret, how can we trust it?
Rupert Murdoch's wife is not on Twitter, the company confirmed today. But what it did not detail is how the account became 'verified', a system that goes to the very heart of Twitter.
-
Murdoch's iPad newspaper: Nice try, but no chance
There was some buzz over the weekend that a team over at News Corp., the parent company behind the Wall Street Journal and Fox News, is hard at work on an iPad-only "newspaper," called The Daily,...
-
Murdoch's plan to fix Web news is a good start but it needs aggregators
News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch has vowed to fix the "malfunctioning" business model for news within a year. His solution: charge for access to the content. (Techmeme) It seems to work for the Wall...
Additional Results
-
Sex Tech: IsAnyoneUp, UK ISP filter conspiracy theories, no porn for Coke
Hunter Moore investigated by FBI, UK porn filter conspiracy theories, Coca Cola vs. porn cybersquatters and Big Porn is sued for patent infringement.
-
Murdoch on MySpace: "We screwed up in every way possible"
Rupert Murdoch on MySpace, speaking on Twitter, he admitted News Corp.'s failings in how MySpace was handled.
-
Murdoch's 'wife' fools Twitter: If its verification process is secret, how can we trust it?
Rupert Murdoch's wife is not on Twitter, the company confirmed today. But what it did not detail is how the account became 'verified', a system that goes to the very heart of Twitter.
-
Rupert Murdoch starts tweeting; Twitterverse returns heavy fire
News Corporation's Rupert Murdoch has joined Twitter. It's definitely him, and the Twitterverse is responding with very heavy fire, after an annus horribilis for his media empire.
-
The Indian connection: MurdochGate, IE user's IQ, S&P
Three of the top stories in the past two months have an Indian connections. An Indian who conned the tech media, HCL involved in the News International phone hacking controversy and an Indian who...
-
LulzSec returns, this time aimed at Rupert Murdoch
LulzSec, a hacking group that allegedly disbanded, has returned to hack into Rupert Murdoch's Sun newspaper site.
-
"The News of the World" will live on in the spirit of SoDOMM...
The News of the World newspaper is being closed because of the scandalous behavior of its journalists. But scandals and celebrity gossip dominate social media...
-
Royal phone hacking scandal: Police to reveal victims' names
A key ruling yesterday by a high court judge said redacted notes by police must be revealed, showing the names of victims involved. Also, one already convicted party must reveal who he worked for.
-
Murdoch's iPad newspaper: Nice try, but no chance
There was some buzz over the weekend that a team over at News Corp., the parent company behind the Wall Street Journal and Fox News, is hard at work on an iPad-only "newspaper," called The Daily,...
-
Apple alliance with Murdoch raises troubling questions
Apple is working with Rupert Murdoch's News Inc to create an iPad-only newspaper. Will Apple relax its tight publishing rules? What will it mean for other publishers?
-
"Pathetic" criticism of Murdoch's paywalls
Rupert Murdoch draws new criticism as he prepares paywalls for The Times newspaper...
-
News to know: Google Tablet; Mobile OS updates; iPad; Murdoch; Office 2010
Google Tablet and mobile updates top today's headlines
-
Murdoch: Tablets, e-readers and smartphones are "lifeless" without content
News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch said content is what brings life to these new devices
-
Famous, wealthy conservative favors clean energy
Newscorp heir favors clean energy for America's future, urges conservative support.
-
East Anglia hacking leads to data publication? Or destruction?
East Anglia to release what climate data it has.
-
Is Google the Center of the Universe?
It's not even a year since the triumphalism of Jeff Jarvis's Google 'reverse engineering' book 'What Would Google Do?' hit the book shelves, but it seems an age ago now. Jarvis's publisher Harper...
-
Should search engines pay tribute to content?
There's some basic math at work here. The smaller your circulation base, the more specialized it is, the better off you'll do with either a paid model or a registration model.
The best of ZDNet, delivered
ZDNet Newsletters
Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox




