Murdoch Phone Hacking Story Just Gets Worse And Worse
from the rupert-running-for-cover dept
Following the reports that employees for Rupert Murdoch's UK tabloid "News of the World" hadn't just hacked into the voicemails of politicians and celebrities, but also those of a murdered teenager (in which they supposedly deleted some message, leading to false hope that the girl was still alive), now come reports that News of the World hacked into the voicemails of the families of soldiers who died in Iraq and Afghanistan.On top of that, it's also come out that the former editor of the paper, Rebekah Brooks was allegedly warned by Scotland Yard about possible illegal spying taking place via the paper's resources. In that case, she was warned that a reporter was helping two murder suspects spy on the detective investigating them. In other words, we're getting way past just hacking into voicemails and into interfering with police investigations.
Not surprisingly, the Murdoch family is in full-on crisis mode. Advertisers are bailing on the paper, the Murdochs' relationships with top politicians in the UK are being scrutinized and it seems likely that this is one scandal that won't be easily brushed under the rug.
Making matters even crazier, to help deal with the crisis, Murdoch has actually hired the (former) prosecutor who originally investigated the hacking allegations back in 2005 & 2006, and knew the extent of them, but didn't do much about them. Apparently, UK politicians are screaming about this being a pretty serious conflict of interest, given that the guy failed to do much about the news of the hacking early on. You would think that the Murdochs would realize just how bad hiring this guy would look, but it's beginning to become clear that they're really not sure at all how to react to this news coming out in public after all these years.
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Filed Under: eavesdropping, milly dowler, news of the world, rupert murdoch, voicemails
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This is bigger than Watergate now, and tarnishes every 'journalist' that ever worked for News International. Even thw WSJ and the NYT have had top acknowledge that this is big. Brooks should fall on her sword, because there are a few angry parents right now who know where she lives.
And as for Murdoch calling it a smear campaign, he has absolutely no right to talk, given the level of damage his so-called news outlet Fox has done to political candidates in the past thirty years.
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Aren't Fox News addicts a fun, super-informed bunch?
God this is awesome....
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the post is owned by news corp... nyt is owned by new york times corp which is a publicly traded company.
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murdoch is dumb... but he isnt an idiot. if he can own two organizations that are going to feed opposing interests in order to capture 100% of a given market (the market demographics in this case being those who like to be counted by those trying to fall asleep) he will do so. thats just smart business.
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Fox news is not factual. It is entirely crap and biased.
To act like the only other option is to be liberal is also full of shit.
Not everyone is as idiotic as some people in treating everything as "rightist/leftist" and failing to notice that republican/liberal are still both corporatist, which is the real issue.
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In your opinion, they aren't factual because you apparently believe that the likes of CNN, MSNBC and the NYT are factual. That's a laugher.
I will agree with you on your last sentence. Republicn (conservative)/Democrat (liberal) are corporatist, the thing is, liberals don't admit it and claim to be for "the working man" or "the little guy."
@eejit.. umm, esplain how Fox and NYT are the same entity?
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LoL
http://www.businessinsider.com/leaked-fox-news-memo-reveals-news-division-told- to-echo-gop-talking-point-2010-12
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/press/leaked-memos-cast -doubt-on-fox-news-claim-of-neutrality-2162660.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/dec/15/f ox-news-climate-change-email
You can't be serious.
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Does it really not occur to you sheep that the opposite of left is right, and that you're just trading one idiotic polar extreme for another?
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However, it seems that using Ofcom's "fit and proper" test in this manner would be a bit of a stretch:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2011/jul/06/news-corporation-mediabusiness
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What's good for the government is good for the press?
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help stop my phone email being hacked
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Re: What's good for the government is good for the press?
WE
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Advertisers
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It is important to note however, that is NOT what is happening here, and charges should be filed against individual reporters, as well as launching an investigation into the other reporters and the organization as a whole.
Note1: If the reporter/newspaper hired, suggested, or otherwise directed someone to the actions, they should be charged as conspirators.
Note2: If they have their own team of hackers to 'find' and sell the information, they should be charged for the crime itself, and possibly as a criminal enterprise.
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Freudian slip?
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As My Dentist Said When He Was Trying To Pull Out A Bad Molar ...
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He is going to try and spin this as being blown out of proportion and if there were anything really seriously wrong here he would have prosecuted them when this first came to light. This is all just people upset with Murdoch getting control of another news outlet and not a "real" story.
And even if someone or several someones fall on their swords, it won't matter. Nothing bad will befall Murdoch, he will sit behind his piles of cash safe and clean.
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Ironic.
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Ha - ha
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It's surprising how we are getting tons of evidence against the concentration of commercial power (Wall-e style). Buy 'n Large isn't what should be happening. Countries that had their land distributed to smaller producers saw the great benefits it brought instead of having huge properties of single genre crops. Maybe it's about time fusions and bloated companies get stopped?
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It wasn't hacking
Guessing the password /= hacking, but then it makes for a better headline for the press
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And yes, brute-force attacks are hacking - just not very effective or time-safe.
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That's the kind of password an idiot puts on their luggage.
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You can't tell me you have evidence that he was involved in this.
The private dick and the papers he worked for sure.
This just seems to be another get Rupert attack piece.
Is this MSNBC? The Daily KOS, Think Progress, Huffington Post, Moveon.org?
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In a death case where you were involved, that would be the 'depraved heart' manslaughter standard.
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This disgusts me on so many levels. I cannot even begin to express the hatred that I have for Murdoch media, but this isn't something I'd expected even from the trash that he publishes. In. Fucking. Credible.
Hopefully this will change the face of English politics for the better.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRVdgoh-4_w
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CLOSED FOR BUSINESS
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http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/07/07/news-of-the-world-shutting-down-after-sunday-editio n
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spin
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"I know I have brought the vilification I am experiencing upon myself, but I do ask the media to leave my family and my children, who are all blameless, alone."
This statement was made by Glenn Mulcaire...
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For someone who is always complaining about misapplied third-party liability, you sure are quick to place blame squarely on Rupert Murdoch for the actions of a handful of the many, many, many employees of his various companies.
The Murdoch name appears 6 times in the article/headline, and the names of the actual hackers do not appear at all.
I'm not a particular fan of Murdoch, but I don't get why we are focusing on him in particular for the actions of one paper and its employees.
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An ISP is not responsible for its user's actions. Google is not responsible for what a user uploads to Youtube. Rupert Murdoch is not responsible because a reader of one of his websites writes a defamatory comment.
Comparing those completely different organizational structures is just pitiful.
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But using "Murdoch" as a synonym all his companies/divisions/employees is not something I've seen Mike (or really anyone that I can recall) do for other companies.
Nobody says "Page hires X attorney" or "Bezos hires X attorney" when Google or Amazon hire a law firm for a particular matter (or when some Amazon division/subsidiary like Zappos hires a firm independently).
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There are reports that the police in London were paid off to look the other way when the hacking took place..and so it goes on and on.
I just hope and pray that this will affect 'Faux" News-you can never say it couldn't be possible that NoTW is the only media outlet that's done wrong in the Murdoch empire.
Murdoch just reached his tipping point in his quest for world domination of the news. Now he can say bye-bye to the BSky deal. That one's a goner for sure.
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I suppose that the big news about all this is that there is a Rupert Murdoch organization that actually relies on news gathering...
I'll suggest that one of his holdings here in the US really relies more on their opinion than being a provider of news.
Checking into the news gathering techniques used by other parts of the Rupert Murdoch organization is a legitimate question. But I have my doubts this will affect Fox News-- their ratings and therefore profits don't stem from aggressive news gathering.
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The paper is the de facto Sunday edition of that other bastion of journalistic integrity, The Sun. Expect to see 'The Sun on Sunday' launch shortly. They grabbed the domain names on Tuesday.
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Internet bullying
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