http://bit.ly/2NBYvw

12:49pm UK, Monday November 09, 2009

Adam Arnold, Sky News Online

News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch has suggested the company's online
newspaper pages will be invisible to Google users when it launches its
new paid content strategy.

He claimed that readers who randomly reach a page via an internet search
hold little value to advertisers.

When asked by Sky News Australia's political editor David Speers why
News Corp has not stopped Google from finding its content, Mr Murdoch
replied: "I think we will."

He cited the Wall Street Journal as an example of where only the first
paragraph comes up on search engines and is free. Anything after that is
subscription-based.

He is planning to make newspapers like The Times and Sunday Times
chargeable online.

Using the robots.txt protocol on a site indicates to automated web
spiders such as Google's not to index that particular page or to serve
up links to it in users' search results.

As well as Google, he criticised other sites like Microsoft and Ask.com
for also taking a free ride on its content - "the people who just simply
pick up everything and run with it - steal our stories ... without
payment", he claimed.

He said: "There's not enough advertising in the world to make all the
websites profitable. We'd rather have fewer people coming to our
websites but paying.

"There are no news websites or blog websites anywhere in the world
making any serious money, some may be making breaking even or making a
couple of million."

Referring to people finding News Corp stories via search engine
websites, he said: "When they click it, they get the page with the story
that's in our paper.

"Who knows who they are or where they are. They don't suddenly become
loyal readers of our content."

He then turned his attention to the BBC, saying it was a "scandal" that
everyone with a TV was "compelled" to pay a licence fee.

He said although the BBC did not charge for its own online content, it
was the taxpayer who was ultimately paying for it.

Earlier in the year, his son, James Murdoch, called for major changes in
the way UK broadcasting is run and regulated, and strongly criticised
the BBC and TV watchdogs.

:: News Corporation is a minority shareholder in BSkyB, which runs Sky
News.
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