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LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch sowed the seeds of the phone hacking scandal that has tarnished his reputation by forcing Britain's most respected newspapers into "a Faustian bargain" with the powerful, a former editor of the UK's Times newspaper said on Thursday. Harry Evans told a British media inquiry how as editor of the Times he battled attempts by Murdoch to compel him to support British
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese legal authorities have confiscated the license of one lawyer and threatened to do the same to another after they volunteered to defend Chen Kegui, the nephew of blind Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng. The moves come as Chen Guangcheng, whose escape last month sparked an international furor, said Chinese officials were "going crazy" with reprisals against his family in
Andy Coulson, a former editor of The News of the World Sunday tabloid who later became Prime Minister David Cameron’s communications director, is expected to testify on Thursday.
Following a scathing British parliamentary report declaring Rupert Murdoch unfit to run a media empire, BSkyB insisted on Wednesday that its own track record should determine fitness to hold a broadcasting license.
LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch is not fit to run a major international company, British lawmakers said on Tuesday, finding him ultimately responsible for the illegal phone hacking that has corroded his global media empire and damaged the political establishment. The lawmakers said the 81-year-old News Corp chief lacked credibility, his son James appeared incompetent and the company was guilty
Politicians and media commentators are asking whether Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain can survive any further revelations about his close ties with the Murdochs.
A damning report on the hacking scandal at Rupert Murdoch’s British papers convulsed the political and media worlds in Britain and threatens a core asset of News Corporation.
The widening scandal involving Murdoch media interests is seen as having potentially serious political repercussions for the Cameron government.
The phone-hacking scandal in Britain is taking a toll on Rupert Murdoch’s broader holdings, prompting worry at News Corporation that years of business dealings could draw new attention.
Rupert Murdoch, the chief of News Corporation, spread blame around in the hacking scandal, singling out former employees and others.
LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch is used to slipping into Downing Street by the back door for discreet meetings with prime ministers, but there was no such privacy on Wednesday when he faced a grilling about his political influence in the full glare of the world's media. It was one of the most extraordinary days in a career spanning six decades that has seen the owner of a provincial Australian
LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch batted away accusations on Wednesday that he used his vast media empire to play puppet master to a succession of British leaders, electrifying a media inquiry that has shaken faith in Prime Minister David Cameron's government.
The News Corporation chief testified at an inquiry on Wednesday as e-mails pointed to ties between a lobbyist for his company and the office of Britain’s Culture Minister.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Before joining Republican Mitt Romney's presidential campaign last week as a spokesman, Richard Grenell was a prolific - and inflammatory - voice on Twitter, posting biting commentary on subjects ranging from Newt Gingrich's weight to Michelle Obama exercising in the White House. No more. Since he joined Romney's campaign as foreign affairs spokesman, many of Grenell's most
I spent a fair chunk of my day today at a hackathon, and not one that I participated in. I was a mere judge, and along with a few other...
The suit concerns a case in which a reporter, who is no longer with the newspaper, hacked into the e-mail account of a police detective.
Mark Lewis, a British lawyer, said he planned to sue in the United States on behalf of victims who allege they were the subject of phone hacking by Rupert Murdoch’s British tabloids.


(Reuters) - A Chinese defense contractor on Saturday denied that documents posted to the Web by a computer hacker came from an intrusion of the company, as the hacker said in public statements and interviews with Reuters. China National Electronics Import & Export Corp, known as CEIEC, called the reports "totally groundless, highly subjective and defamatory" in a statement posted to its English-l

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