EditorsAbout the SiteComes vs. MicrosoftUsing This Web SiteSite ArchivesCredibility IndexOOXMLOpenDocumentPatentsNovellNews DigestSite NewsRSS

11.20.09

What Makes Mr. Murdoch Tick

Posted in Deception, Google, Microsoft at 8:59 pm by Roy Schestowitz

Tick

Summary: Rupert Murdoch wants Google to feed him despite being a blood-sucking tycoon who does not pay people whom his publications cover

ONE of our readers insists that Microsoft is connected to Rupert Murdoch, who is busy calling Google “illegal” these days. This reader has just sent us this pointer to show that Murdoch gives a bad name to Google, especially in the public arena where publications are involved directly*. He poisons people’s minds against Google for no valid, defensible reason.

Rupert Murdoch is simply looking for publicity when he says he ‘may’ want to block Google search. We all know he do not want to. This is because unless he has an extremely incompetent IT department (which he don’t), they will tell him inserting a simple robot.txt will do the trick. Google (and Microsoft and Yahoo and other reputable search engine had been honouring robot.txt file for ages.

In addition to the Gates|Murdoch parody, we have some serious posts on the subject, such as:

Now comes this analysis from TechDirt: “Would Top Sites Really Opt-Out Of Google Based On A Microsoft Bribe?”

Every so often, internet pontificators try to come up with ways to “kill Google.” It’s a silly game, but in an oddly timed move, three people (who have all put forth “how to kill Google” ideas in the past) all suddenly published similar ideas, yet again. Jason Calacanis, Mark Cuban and Tom Foremski all posted similar ideas about how certain sites (such as the top sites in the top search results) could all choose to opt-out of Google and, say, join another search engine like Bing. It’s one of those ideas that sounds good for about 5 seconds. And then you actually think about it. First, the numbers being tossed around concerning how much it would cost, say, Microsoft, to convince most of these sites to opt-out of their number one driver of traffic is significantly higher than what’s being mentioned in these articles. Many of these sites rely on Google traffic to make a ton of money, and they’re not going to throw that away easily.

As TechDirt used to point out very shrewdly, those who exploit are not the bloggers who merely read and search engines that borrow phrases from newspapers; the exploiters are actually newspapers and authors who are exploiting people and events, on whom they report without ‘compensating’ those who get covered (and truly “break” the stories). It is difficult to justify “owning” a story, just as it should be impossible to “own” thoughts and ideas, even prose and mathematics (or algorithms). It complicates things too much.

Murdoch is of course wrong and those predatory hounds who give Microsoft and Murdoch ideas are looking for personal gain (just look up their professional history). As the BBC put it today, “Twitter urges Murdoch to be open”

Newspapers should become “radically open” if they want to make money in the online world, the co-founder of social networking site Twitter has said.

Biz Stone said that he would “love to see what happens” if newspaper mogul Rupert Murdoch went ahead with plans to block Google from his websites.

Stone is right in this case. As The Guardian showed a few days ago, even the London Evening Standard had found out that wide distribution comes before per-unit revenue. It’s about spreading ideas, giving readers what they want.

London Evening Standard slashes distribution costs by going free

The London Evening Standard has slashed its distribution costs from 30p a copy to just 4p since going free, its editor, Geordie Greig, revealed today.

Greig said the paper – which axed a 50p cover price to become free last month, more than doubling its circulation to 600,000 – had been spending 12p a copy on newsagents.

Professor Jay Rosen, who is highly regarded among journalists, is now sharing this long list of subsidy sources for news outlets. And as a side note, at Boycott Novell we have no subsidy; maybe we will appeal to readers for help one day.
____
* The Register too spends an obscene amount of time slamming Google these days. Several people have already noticed and reported this.

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • co.mments
  • DZone
  • email
  • Google Bookmarks
  • LinkedIn
  • NewsVine
  • Print
  • Propeller
  • Slashdot
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • Webnews
  • YahooMyWeb

If you liked this post, consider subscribing to the RSS feed or join us now at the IRC channel. To use your own IRC client, join channel #boycottnovell in FreeNode.

Pages that cross-reference this one

3 Comments

  1. Needs Sunlight said,

    November 21, 2009 at 4:28 am

    Gravatar

    It’s obvious that Murdock is out to smear Google and only Google.

    Otherwise, if it were a matter of having the material not indexed, he would have had his staff properly configure the robots.txt file for his site.

    But since there is no mention of robot exclusion rules, which Google follows correctly by the way, and because Murdock’s bile is directed at Google and only Google, one conclusion is that he’s part of somebody’s agenda or media campaign.

    Roy Schestowitz Reply:

    Maybe he’s ‘pulling a Beck’ on Google? You know, that guy whom he employs in Fox to serve the political crusades…

  2. uberVU - social comments said,

    November 21, 2009 at 3:06 pm

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by OnlineSalesMngr: Murdoch vs Google (or is Murdoch secretly doing a deal with Microsoft?) http://bit.ly/5pS2QZ...

What Else is New


  1. Eye on Microsoft: Signs of Game Over

    The press seems pessimistic about Microsoft, which is increasingly seen as unable to evolve and innovate; Microsoft's security problems (and security PR) persist in a major way



  2. Windows 'Battery Killer' (Vista 7) Also Has USB Data Transfer Issues and Stability Problems, Does Not Sell Well

    Vista 7 is plagued by serious bugs and new patches from Microsoft are said to be making things even worse; Microsoft is still unable to formulate a response to the new problems and Vista 7 sales continue to disappoint, so more vapourware and fake "leaks" are being used instead



  3. Norwegian Agency for Public Management and eGovernment Slams Microsoft OOXML

    The authorities in Norway justify the country's decision to reject Microsoft's standards-hostile ploy



  4. Steve Ballmer Visits Obama Once Again as His Fight Against Google Continues

    Updates on the competition between Microsoft and Google -- a rivalry that takes political form



  5. Microsoft's Hostile Takeover of the Healthcare System

    Microsoft wants to make medical records and management of patients a lot more dependent on Windows and its own private servers



  6. More Mono and Patent Poison from Novell

    “Pinta” comes from Novell staff and software patents tax (on SLE*) comes from Microsoft in the form of vouchers



  7. Patents Roundup: EFF Defends VoIP; Google, Apple, and Black Duck Stifle Progress; Microsoft Joins RPX

    A quick look at some patent news from the past week, ranging from defence to offence



  8. United Nations and World Bank Help Bill Gates and Microsoft Colonise Africa

    Microsoft's and Gates' incursions in Africa are backed by self-serving Western agenda of patents and proprietary software



  9. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: February 8th, 2010

    IRC Log for February 8th, 2010



  10. Links 8/2/2010: Linux 2.6.33 RC7 and Parsix GNU/Linux 3.0r2 Released

    Links for the day



  11. Xbox 360 Still Under Many Lawsuits

    Lawsuits from many fronts add to the trouble that Microsoft's Xbox 360 already faces



  12. Facebook and Microsoft Revisited; New Examples of Microsoft Entryism

    A look at Facebook's relationship with Microsoft in 2010; Microsoft employees have an effect in competitors of Microsoft, so this issue is addressed too



  13. Microsoft Still Exploits the Taxpayers-Funded NASA to Spread Silver Lie and Close Down Research

    Microsoft-imposed corruption of NASA's obligation to the public carries on as it strives to capture academia too



  14. Microsoft 'Cloud' Falls Offline for a Quarter of a Day, Zune 'Cloud' Deletes Music, Microsoft Shop Also Kaput

    Microsoft continues to give online operations and online storage a bad name because of its sheer incompetence



  15. Ubuntu Perspectives: Signs of Change

    Analysis of Canonical's latest moves, which are being defended by some and severely criticised by others



  16. Apple's Newton Executive Negative About Apple's Latest Attempts at a Shinier Newton

    Apple's iPad still faces sometimes-overwhelming criticism, even from the company's own supporters and existing/former staff



  17. Microsoft Loses Another Vice President, Management Vacuum Alarms the Press

    Another Microsoft Vice President has just left Microsoft, joining the ranks of many more



  18. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: February 7th, 2010

    IRC Log for February 7th, 2010



  19. Links 07/2/2010: Linux Mint 8 KDE, Linus on Nexus One

    Links for the day



  20. Patents Roundup: Extortion, Protection Rackets, Patent Trolling, and Small Victory for Mozilla

    Johnson and Johnson's multi-billion-dollar patent fine, patents' harms to real science and life, patent trolls thrive, and Mozilla's opposition to patent-encumbered codecs gradually pays off



  21. The Microsoft Apologists and Boosters Really, Really Like Novell!

    A complete list of news articles about Moonlight 3.0 preview shows that its biggest fans are Microsoft fans



  22. iPad is Like Zune

    iPad -- like Zune -- might not reach the European Union (EU), possibly due to lukewarm reception and lack of appeal, not trademarks



  23. Microsoft Shows Yet Again That It is Allergic to GNU/Linux

    Microsoft's hatred of GNU/Linux, as demonstrated in this weekend's news



  24. Michael Arrington a Hypocrite: Bribed by Microsoft Yet Fires Bribed Bloggers

    Another fine example of an influential blogger who sells out to Microsoft yet does not apply to himself the same standards that he applies to colleagues



  25. Microsoft Refuses to Comment About (Deny) the Sex Parties, Drug Use

    No denial from Microsoft in the face of very strong allegations



  26. Another Misdirected Response from the Government to the Company “Not Engineered for Security”

    Another terrible month for Microsoft insecurity and the government is still unable to respond sensibly to the threat



  27. IRC: #boycottnovell @ FreeNode: February 6th, 2010

    IRC Log for February 6th, 2010



  28. Links 6/2/2010: GNOME Journal Released, ARM CEO Sees Bright Future

    Links for the day



  29. Novell Executives Still Cannot Write Blog Posts?

    New evidence of ghostwriters in Novell's own Web site



  30. Microsoft Wants More Licensing Instead of Windows Bans

    At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Microsoft super-lobbyist Craig Mundie requests new laws that complicate the Internet and ignore the real problem (Microsoft negligence)


RSS 64x64RSS Feed: subscribe to the RSS feed for regular updates

Home iconSite Wiki: You can improve this site by helping the extension of the site's content

Chat iconIRC Channel: Come and chat with us in real time

Recent Posts