News of the World Hacking Scandal

Started by Tony Baloney, July 05, 2011, 08:01:30 PM

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seafoid

The FT sticks it to Murdoch .
Spellbinding. It is all falling apart. 

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97eb2a6a-a8bc-11e0-b877-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz1RVSINbRq

Nemesis chases Murdoch's hubris
By Philip Stephens

The game is up for Rupert Murdoch. The head of News Corp has held sway over Britain's media industry for a generation. Prime ministers have feared and feted him. He has outwitted regulators and outgunned rivals. Now, suddenly, it is all unravelling. The media mogul has lost his touch. These things happen.News International, Mr Murdoch's London-based company, is under criminal investigation for alleged telephone hacking and illegal payments to police officers. Scotland Yard has 50 officers on the case. Executives have been accused, under the protection of parliamentary privilege of perverting the course of justice. The allegations about the activities at the tabloid News of the World have stirred a wave of public revulsion. With advertisers threatening a boycott and the prime minister endorsing calls for a public inquiry, the company has announced the closure of the best-selling 168-year-old Sunday title. It will probably re-emerge as the Sunday Sun.

Yet from his jet-set swirl of media conferences and cocktail parties in the US, the News Corp chief has inexplicably expressed personal confidence in Rebekah Brooks, the News International chief executive at the epicentre of the controversy. He has offered a few anodyne words about "deplorable" and "unacceptable" behaviour. There was a time when the businessman who built News Corp would have gripped such a crisis at the outset.
The exquisite irony is that this was supposed to have been a good week for Mr Murdoch. David Cameron's government had been preparing to signal approval for an £8bn-plus bid allowing News Corp to buy full control of British Sky Broadcasting. The deal has been trailed as a crowning achievement for the man who pioneered satellite television; everything would be in place for the business's eventual transfer to his son James.

Instead, had Mr Murdoch senior tuned in to his own Sky News channel he would have seen politicians of every stripe in the House of Commons venting their rage at the alleged illegal activities of his media empire. It has been known for some time that the News of the World had hacked the voicemails of celebrities, politicians and royals. The new avalanche of disclosures, however, was of an entirely different order.

Allegations that the newspaper's surveillance extended to interference with the telephone of a murdered schoolgirl and routine interception of the intimate messages of the families of murder and terrorist victims have shocked the nation. It seems that private investigators working for the newspaper may also have tapped into the voicemail of bereaved families of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Despicable, heinous and disgusting are adjectives that spring most easily to mind.

News International has also acknowledged that it paid large amounts of money to police officers in return for information. Such payments are illegal. Speaking under the protection of parliamentary privilege, MPs have charged executives with lying to cover up criminal activities. Tom Watson, a former Labour minister, has accused James Murdoch and Ms Brooks of perverting the course of justice.

Watching these politicians throw bricks has been to realise that the News Corp spell has been broken. There has always been something faintly hysterical about the charge that British politics has been held helpless hostage to the Murdoch empire. He has never been as powerful as his enemies imagined. For all that, it has been instructive to watch the fears of retribution draining away; and, with them, Mr Murdoch's power.

Mr Cameron has looked at best distinctly uncomfortable. Like his predecessors, the prime minister has been assiduous in courting Mr Murdoch. Andy Coulson, who resigned as editor of the News of the World during an earlier stage in the scandal, was until recently the Downing Street communications director. The error of judgment on Mr Cameron's part has been compounded by a friendship with Ms Brooks. He has been making quite a habit of getting things wrong.
This week the prime minister had no option but to accept a call from the Labour leader Ed Miliband for a public inquiry into the scandal. The talk now in Number 10 is of the need to establish visible distance between the prime minister and News Corp. Mr Murdoch, one aide has been heard to say, may still get an audience with Mr Cameron – as long as he enters by the back door.
Judicious distancing, however, is not going to be enough for Mr Cameron. If there has been a common thread through the expressions of anger and outrage this week it is that Mr Murdoch's empire represents an unhealthy concentration of media power.
Ownership of four newspapers and Britain's second largest broadcaster is simply too much. Some Tory MPs are backing Mr Miliband's demand that the prime minister call a halt to the BSkyB deal at the very least until all the criminal investigations are completed and a judgment can be made on whether News International is a fit and proper proprietor for the broadcaster.
Ministers insist that they must observe the legal proprietaries in examining the bid. But there is room within them for delay. A genuinely penitent company would shelve its bid unless and until its executives are exonerated of the charges of criminal activity.
Mr Murdoch can complain that the News of the World was not alone in acting illegally in pursuit of front-page scoops. Hacking into voicemails was once widespread. Other tabloids hired dodgy private investigators. So Mr Cameron's public inquiry will have to cast its net much wider than News International.
As always, though, News International operated with a ruthlessness and on a scale that left its rivals behind. Within the industry, the News of the World was said to be "out of control". Mr Murdoch has bungled his response at every turn. Instead of acting decisively when a dam of new allegations burst last year, he backed a failed strategy of evasion and obfuscation. Now he has run out of time. Ms Brooks is beyond saving. So, probably, is Mr Murdoch's last big media dream. Nemesis is fast catching up with hubris

Doogie Browser

It was also said on Question Time last night that most MP's were running scared of Brooks and if they dared challenge her they would have got the full treatment in one of the rags, outing Gay MP's etc.

thebigfella

Quote from: ziggysego on July 08, 2011, 10:40:07 AM
Without a doubt they're all at it. Why else was there very little coverage about this in the papers until this week, bar the Guardian.

Ah yes the smug guardian with it's even more smug liberal readership.

deiseach

Quote from: thebigfella on July 08, 2011, 01:32:09 PM
Quote from: ziggysego on July 08, 2011, 10:40:07 AM
Without a doubt they're all at it. Why else was there very little coverage about this in the papers until this week, bar the Guardian.

Ah yes the smug guardian with it's even more smug liberal readership.

I think the Graun has plenty to be smug about this week

Hardy

Quote from: muppet on July 08, 2011, 10:31:35 AM
Quote from: ONeill on July 07, 2011, 09:36:02 PM
It'd be foolish to think Murdoch's babies are alone here. I'd imagine almost every tabloid and broadsheet has their hands dirty here. They just haven't been found out yet.

It would be foolish to absolve Murdock's babies on the premise: 'they are all at it'. They should lock anyone up that is known to be involved so far and keep investigating imho.

I agree. Imho is up to his lugs in it.

seafoid

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/26c8ca90-a8d5-11e0-b877-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1RVRnz93j

"The strategy seems to be to destroy as much value of the company as possible by consistently underestimating the power of story and overestimating their ability to control it."


Apparently Brooks offered to resign twice and was twice rejected. Murdoch has lost the plot.
He really reminds me of Hugh Hefner, another man who made a fortune
challenging the sexual  mores of society in the 60s.

thebigfella

Quote from: seafoid on July 08, 2011, 02:49:54 PM
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/26c8ca90-a8d5-11e0-b877-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1RVRnz93j

"The strategy seems to be to destroy as much value of the company as possible by consistently underestimating the power of story and overestimating their ability to control it."


Apparently Brooks offered to resign twice and was twice rejected. Murdoch has lost the plot.
He really reminds me of Hugh Hefner, another man who made a fortune
challenging the sexual  mores of society in the 60s.

What a highbrow and intellectual comparison to make. Did you tell that one round the dinner party table last night with your middle class friends? Bet they all nodded in agreement before turning the conversation back to your condemnation of Israel and they're treatment of the Palestinians  ::) ::) ::)

AQMP

Quote from: thebigfella on July 08, 2011, 02:59:32 PM
Quote from: seafoid on July 08, 2011, 02:49:54 PM
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/26c8ca90-a8d5-11e0-b877-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1RVRnz93j

"The strategy seems to be to destroy as much value of the company as possible by consistently underestimating the power of story and overestimating their ability to control it."


Apparently Brooks offered to resign twice and was twice rejected. Murdoch has lost the plot.
He really reminds me of Hugh Hefner, another man who made a fortune
challenging the sexual  mores of society in the 60s.

What a highbrow and intellectual comparison to make. Did you tell that one round the dinner party table last night with your middle class friends? Bet they all nodded in agreement before turning the conversation back to your condemnation of Israel and they're treatment of the Palestinians  ::) ::) ::)

What's wrong with being highbrow and intellectual?

seafoid

Quote from: Fionntamhnach on July 08, 2011, 02:47:28 PM
Quote from: ziggysego on July 08, 2011, 10:40:07 AM
Without a doubt they're all at it. Why else was there very little coverage about this in the papers until this week, bar the Guardian.
In fairness the Telegraph were also quick to follow it up and didn't hesitate to make it their lead headline. The Guardian were the first to break it though. Plenty of dithering from the tabolids and "upmarket" papers in either publishing it is keeping it well down the pecking order until it became impossible to treat it trivially. It pretty much tells by stealth that it's not just the News of the World who were up to no good. Indeed BBC 5 Live are reporting that the Daily Star offices have been raided by the police.

once the Telegraph joined the party the game was up. 

seafoid

Murdoch has let down the 7.5 million people who read the News of the World.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/08/phone-hacking-emails-news-international

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal.
The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.
According to legal sources close to the police inquiry, a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities' of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair

passedit



This is what'll bring down the big beasts. Cameron to do a Gerald Ford on Murdoch

Quote from: seafoid on July 08, 2011, 04:24:51 PM
Murdoch has let down the 7.5 million people who read the News of the World.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jul/08/phone-hacking-emails-news-international

Police are investigating evidence that a News International executive may have deleted millions of emails from an internal archive, in an apparent attempt to obstruct Scotland Yard's inquiry into the phone-hacking scandal.
The archive is believed to have reached back to January 2005 revealing daily contact between News of the World editors, reporters and outsiders, including private investigators. The messages are potentially highly valuable both for the police and for the numerous public figures who are suing News International.
According to legal sources close to the police inquiry, a senior executive is believed to have deleted 'massive quantities' of the archive on two separate occasions, leaving only a small fraction to be disclosed. One of the alleged deletions is said to have been made at the end of January this year, just as Scotland Yard was launching Operation Weeting, its new inquiry into the affair
Don't Panic

gerry

God bless the hills of Dooish, be they heather-clad or lea,

seafoid

From the Guardian

Sophy Ridge of Sky News is doing a great job of getting info out from the Brooks meeting, here's the latest:

@sophyridge Rebekah Brooks said that advertisers said the brand was "toxic" I'm hearing, and the decision "was not done lightly"
@sophyridge Rebekah Brooks says she is staying on because she is a conductor for it all
@sophyridge Rebekah Brooks says the decision to close the NotW was taken because there was another two years plus ahead of trouble.
4.25pm: Earlier we heard that a number of charities, including the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, "have rejected the chance to advertise for free in the final edition of the News of the World on Sunday" – (hat tip to Celina Ribeiro on civilsociety.co.uk.)
The RNLI have got in touch to say they weren't approached by the News of the World – but if they were to have been, they'd have turned it down anyway as it would be "potentially damaging to our reputation as a charity and to our ability to raise funds".Ouch.
Statement from RNLI:
The RNLI has not been approached by the News of the World with an offer of free advertising. However, if we were to be, we believe accepting any such offer would be potentially damaging to our reputation as a charity and to our ability to raise funds – this is borne out unanimously by the comments we have received from our supporters so far today.

Shamrock Shore

As a matter of interest......has anyone here bought this pile of poo in the past 12 months?

I'd say it's over 20 years since I picked it up.

deiseach

Quote from: Fionntamhnach on July 08, 2011, 05:09:10 PM
This scandal keeps getting better and better, or worse and worse depending on how you frame it. Could be both really.

Better. Definitely better