Bangkok Post

News Corp launches news aggregatio­n service Knewz

-

WASHINGTON: Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp on Wednesday unveiled an online news aggregatio­n service, aiming to break away from the tech platforms that dominate digital media.

The applicatio­n called Knewz, now being tested, will include content from more than 400 sources in the United States and worldwide, including AlJazeera, Mother Jones, The Washington Post and Murdoch’s own Fox News.

A News Corp statement said the app would offer the latest news from the widest variety of sources, free of filter bubbles and narrowmind­ed nonsense.

If successful, the project could steer readers away from major tech platforms such as Google and Facebook, which scoop up the majority of online ad revenues and user data.

“Knewz is unique in that readers can, at a single glance, see multiple sources,” said Robert Thomson, chief executive officer of News Corp.

“It is not egregious aggregatio­n but generous aggregatio­n. There are mastheads from across the political and regional spectrum, and premium publishers will not be relegated in the rankings.

“Knewz combines cutting edge, proprietar­y artificial intelligen­ce with experience­d editors and curates a selection of headlines that provide a broad perspectiv­e on stories of the day.

“Readers will have access to publishers large and small, niche and general, located in all 50 states,” he said.

“We live in a world of vexatious verticals, of crass clickbait, of polarised perspectiv­es and fallacious, fact-free feeds — Knewz is knowing and needed.”

Knewz will share as much data as possible with publishers, ensuring that they have every opportunit­y to monetise their content.

The new service will be up against aggregatio­n applicatio­ns from Apple, Google and Facebook, which face criticism for gleaning user data that is not shared with news organisati­ons.

News Corp has been among the fiercest critics of big tech firms, claiming that they take advantage of news organisati­ons without adequate compensati­on.

But last year it joined in a project with Facebook, which unveiled a plan that would compensati­on publishers whose content is available on the social network.

News Corp is part of the media empire created by the Australian-born Murdoch which includes The Wall Street Journal and dailies in Britain and Australia.

Murdoch, 88, is the executive chairman and his son Lachlan is co-chairman. The family also controls Fox Corp which includes the cable news outlet Fox News.

Damian Radcliffe, a University of Oregon journalism professor, said Knewz “has assembled an impressive group of news outlets and offers some potential for news organisati­ons struggling in the digital environmen­t.

“This looks like an effort to create a news aggregator that isn’t reliant upon

Silicon Valley, and the whims of the algorithms, and revenue models which underpin those platforms,” he said.

“It remains unclear whether the new service will be able to break the so-called filter bubbles that readers find themselves in to reinforce their views,’’ said former USA Today editor

Ken Paulson, who is now on the faculty at Middle Tennessee State University.

“I wish them well, but I have to wonder whether the average user, given a choice among coverage by Fox News, Mother Jones or The Washington Post won’t simply gravitate to their usual source,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Knewz will include content from more than 400 sources in the United States and worldwide, including Al-Jazeera, Mother Jones, The Washington Post and Rupert Murdoch’s own Fox News.
AFP Knewz will include content from more than 400 sources in the United States and worldwide, including Al-Jazeera, Mother Jones, The Washington Post and Rupert Murdoch’s own Fox News.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand