In remarks to the organization led by newspaper editors, Schmidt said mobile devices such as Apple’s iPad and his company’s Android phone will help newspapers better connect with readers.
Responding to Murdoch
“This is the future,” Schmidt said as he held up an iPad, a Kindle from Amazon.com Inc. and an Android phone. “Technology allows you all to talk directly to your users.” News Corp. Chief Executive Officer Rupert Murdoch said on April 7 that newspaper publishers should prevent Internet search engines, such as Google’s and Microsoft Corp.’s Bing, from linking to full news articles for free. “It’s best to look at Rupert’s comments as in the context of a business negotiation, because he’s a very good businessman,” Schmidt said in response to a question from the audience after his speech to the editors. Even newspaper companies that demand payment for viewing their content online cooperate with Google “because we send a lot of traffic to their sites,” Schmidt said. “We want you to have tools and technologies which will allow you to make a lot of money from those users,” Schmidt said “Because ultimately we need more money going into the system.”
Option of Subscribing
News aggregators should be limited to displaying the headline and a couple of sentences of a news story, and give the user the option of subscribing to the originating publication, according to Murdoch, whose New York-based company publishes the Wall Street Journal among newspapers in the U.S., U.K. and Australia.
News Corp.’s international unit said March 26 it will charge for online access to The Times of London and The Sunday Times newspapers starting in June.
News aggregators are led by Google, the most popular Internet search engine, and Yahoo! Inc.
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Labels: Apple , Google
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