Popular Articles

India's first stem cell institute to come up in city
Bangalore has been chosen as the location to set up India’s first major stem cell institute. The institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, called inStem will be set up by the Department of Biotechnology (DBT), government of India at an investment of Rs 200 crore. http://smallpersonalloans.org.uk

OMC under-recoveries at Rs 45,478 cr, says Deora
Public sector oil marketing companies(OMCs) are projected to incur under-recoveries of Rs 45,478 crore on retail sale of petrol, diesel, domestic cooking gas and kerosene during 2009-10, based on the refinery gate prices in the first fortnight of December.

News of the day

Govt for filling up vacancies of judges in SC, HC
The government is reminding the Chief Justices of High Courts to initiate the process of filling up the vacancies of judges, Law Minister M Veerappa Moily said, pointing out that there are seven vacancies in the Supreme Court and 240 in High Courts.
International Business

Taking the plunge

Murdoch - pay content: Rupert Murdoch’s promise to end the great news free-for-all is bold but risky. The media mogul is vowing to do at News Corporation what most of his rivals dream of — charge for access to all online news content. The flagging industry has seen profits disappear with the rise of the internet, a trend accelerated by the recession, and needs a powerful player to move first. But even Murdoch will find this endeavour tricky. - News Corp slips into red; posts $203 mn quarterly loss - Fox bags rights for My Name Is Khan in Rs 100 crore deal - News Corp plans shakeup of Star Asian TV: report - Media moguls Twitter over slump - News Corp"s Murdoch to hold onto cash until recovery - Command and control The trumpeted move is somewhat of a u-turn for Murdoch, who has over the years publicly mused on various business models for news content. Shortly after buying Dow Jones at the top of cycle in 2007 he mulled scrapping subscription charges for wsj.com, one of the few news sites to charge, to pursue an advertising-funded model. But he quickly abandoned that idea. Now the severe economic downturn, which has hammered advertising revenue, has pushed him to embrace a subscription model more generally throughout his newspapers. Few have so far succeeded in charging for online news content. The greatest success has been in financial journalism where FT.com and Breakingviews.com have subscription models, as does wsj.com. But even these have had their challenges. Outside the financial arena, it will be still harder to persuade online readers to part with their cash. The only chance is if publications can produce really high-quality distinctive content — and funding that is getting trickier as they slash their editorial budgets. Murdoch, to be fair, is determined to keep investing in journalism, so that may give his titles an edge. But he still has to work out the precise business model — for example, whether to charge for a subscription or for individual articles. And even if he figures out these issues, the rest of the industry may not follow. While some rival newspapers are dying to introduce online charging, others might see staying free as an opportunity to scoop up market share. And even if these traditional competitors follow suit, plenty of readers will be happy to turn to free sites of broadcasters like the BBC and CNN for their quick fix of daily headlines.


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