DAZN wants to become the “Netflix of sports”. There’s just one problem:Netflix wants that title for itself.
News Corp has finally found a buyer for its storied pay TV offering. But what does the future hold for viewers,staff and sports deals?
News Corp-controlled pay TV and streaming company Foxtel has been sold to DAZN for an enterprise value of $3.4 billion.
Michael Stephenson lands at ARN as it’s looking to free up cash after signing Kyle Sandilands and Jackie “O” Henderson to a landmark $200 million contract.
While News Corp has signed commercial deals with OpenAI,most local publishers have blocked AI firms from scraping their news sites.
The former News Corp editor will lead a new audience growth team as well as the social media,search,audio and video teams.
The No.1 contender to take Foxtel off News Corp’s hands is a British sports streamer that’s potentially banking on a huge influx of cash from Saudi Arabia.
Another senior executive is exiting the media company,with head of sales Michael Stephenson moving on.
Hugh Marks is the ABC’s new managing director,replacing David Anderson,who announced his departure in August after six years in the role.
A concerted campaign by the public broadcaster’s chairman Kim Williams has helped convince the federal government to tip in more dollars.
Labor plans to legislate a yearly charge in the tens of millions of dollars on big social media platforms to fund journalism.