Monday, January 2, 2012

Media mogul Murdoch joins Twitter

By Barry Neild, CNN

January 2, 2012 -- Updated 2027 GMT (0427 HKT) |

Rupert Murdoch has notched up more than 45,000 Twitter followers in two days.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Rupert Murdoch has notched up more than 45,000 followers after joining Twitter
  • Murdoch's tweets so far focus on family, politics and cinema releases
  • 80-year-old's social media appearance called a PR stunt by some
  • News Corp. official confirms to CNN that account is genuine

(CNN) -- A phone hacking scandal may have cost Rupert Murdoch his biggest-selling newspaper in 2011, but the billionaire media mogul managed to end the year with a modest addition to his empire -- an account on Twitter.

Within 48 hours of debuting with tweets about family, work and politics, Murdoch had pulled in more than 45,000 followers and stirred internet debate over why the 80-year-old was now embracing a technology often used to attack him.

The tweets also raised doubts that the notorious technophobe was writing the messages himself. Twitter creator Jack Dorsey -- one of only four people being followed by Murdoch -- however insisted that the media mogul was writing "with his own voice, in his own way."

Murdoch appears to have made his Twitter debut on New Year's Eve with a couple of brief comments on books including the biography of late Apple boss Steve Jobs, which he called "interesting but unfair."

These were followed by praise for cinema releases "We Bought a Zoo," and "The Descendants," both produced by Murdoch's Fox Movies. These fueled suspicions that Murdoch's Twitter account was being used as a publicity tool to help improve his image after a damaging year.

My resolutions, try to maintain humility and always curiosity. And of course diet!
Rupert Murdoch via Twitter

"Could be brilliant News Corp PR operation," Murdoch biographer Michael Wolff tweeted after earlier commenting: "Might be somebody who knows Murdoch, but it's not Rupert (he doesn't use a computer unassisted nor get his own email)."

Others claimed that the voice of the tweets, as well as their faltering grammar and punctuation, were unmistakably Murdoch. "You can tell by the tweets he's doing it himself," wrote CNN's Piers Morgan, a former editor of one of Murdoch's newspapers.

A spokesperson for Murdoch's News Corp. confirmed to CNN the account is genuine.

The account could offer new insight into a businessman whose life has been under intense scrutiny this year after revelations that journalists at News of the World, one of his most profitable newspapers, illegally accessed the voicemail messages of scores of celebrities and public figures.

Twitter played a prominent role at the height of the scandal when it was used to pressure advertisers into boycotting the paper. Commentators said the loss of revenue was a key factor in Murdoch's decision to shut the paper down.

Murdoch's subsequent appearance before a British parliamentary inquiry into phone hacking also caused a sensation on Twitter, particularly after his wife, Wendi Deng, pounced on a man who tried to attack him with a foam pie.

There were echoes of Murdoch's parliamentary appearance -- which he called the "most humble day day of my life" -- in New Year pledges which he tweeted in a January 1 message to Dorsey. "My resolutions, try to maintain humility and always curiosity. And of course diet!"

But there were also signs that the media mogul was still getting to grips with social media. Reports suggested he was forced to quickly delete one post -- possibly after Deng leapt to his aid once again.

The Sydney Morning Herald -- a fierce rival of his Australian publications -- was among news outlets claiming that Murdoch was guilty of "tweeting-before-thinking" for suggesting that the British have too many holidays for a "broke country."

The message was apparently removed, but not before someone tweeting as Wendi Deng implored: "RUPERT!!! delete tweet!" A further post on the unverified Deng account later added: "EVERY1 @rupertmurdoch was only having a joke pROMSIE!!!" [sic]

Murdoch also follows an account that appears on the surface to be Google CEO Larry Page but is actually run by a man in Virginia. It's not clear whether Murdoch realizes he's not following the real Larry Page.

Among other tweets by Murdoch, who also follows Zynga CEO Mark Pincus and Silcon Valley entrepreneur and British businessman Alan Sugar, were an expression of support for Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum.

Part of complete coverage on

The Leveson inquiry is a British government-backed inquiry into illegal eavesdropping and bribery by journalists.

December 20, 2011 -- Updated 1312 GMT (2112 HKT)

Atika Shubert looks back at how phone hacking scandal rocked Britain and Rupert Murdoch's media empire in 2011.

November 30, 2011 -- Updated 1421 GMT (2221 HKT)

Alistair Campbell says UK newspapers print "complete nonsense" to support their owners' agendas.

Damaging allegations over phone hacking are continuing to mount against Rupert Murdoch's media empire.

Rupert Murdoch is the last of a dying breed: An old-fashioned press baron, a tough businessman with a hunger for the next big story.

-- Updated GMT ( HKT)

Rupert Murdoch is facing a two-front war. He will probably escape criminal prosecution in the United Kingdom, unless some senior employee yet turns on him.

UK lawmakers are doing the right thing in severing their ties to the Murdoch empire, says academic Steven Barnett.

September 1, 2011 -- Updated 2307 GMT (0707 HKT)

Former Telegraph publisher Conrad Black sounds off on Rupert Murdoch and calls him a "bad man."

Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/02/tech/rupert-murdoch-twitter/index.html?eref=edition

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