The latest edition of Murdock’s trilling read, ‘the Sunday Times’, features Sir Tony O’Reilly implying that there is some kind of conspiracy to defraud the newspaper industry, saying there is a need for action over copyright theft on the internet in which newspapers are the victims.
“I can see the newspaper industry getting together the same way as the recording industry got together, except in a more effective way,” O’Reilly told the Sunday Times.
O’Reilly is chief executive of Independent News & Media who publish Irish Independent, Sunday Independent, Belfast Telegraph, Evening Herald, Sunday World the Star and a number of regional papers – they also own titles in New Zealand, United Kingdom, South Africa, and India. According to the company’s website, they operate “over 70 on-line editorial and classified sites”. (In addition, O’Reilly is chairperson of Waterford Wedgwood, and Eircom.)

Video advert for '24' DVD on Times Online - can print newspapers do that?
O'Reilly went on to attack the internet as an advertisement medium, saying that some things aren’t suitable to advertise online. Really? What exactly? While at the Sunday Times website Blurred Keys was entertained by advertisements for cars, DVDs, holidays, online poker, along with branding for insurance. A quick look at the Indo’s site gives advertisements for mortgages, Tesco, and motor insurance. The advert for the DVD box set of the TV program '24' on Times Online was a video (pictured above) - can newspapers do that?
In further outburst of conservatism, and a dig at blogs, Sir Tony states “You can trust newspaper writers. Can you trust a blogger?” – well sir, Blurred Keys trusts some blogs a hell of a lot more then we trust newspapers linked to certain people.
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