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Drew B's take on tech PR

Friday, March 17, 2006 at 10:03pm

Nice find Stephen

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Nobleizer

Friday, March 17, 2006 at 11:25pm

“The Sun is the UK’s most read newspaper and powering it online with muscle from web giant MySpace will certainly boost its popularity.”

Erm…

Don’t you mean “MySpace is the UK’s most popular web destination and powering it offline with muscle from newspaper giant The Sun will certainly boost its popularity.”?

I’d say The Sun still had more sway in the UK than anything else. Am I wrong?

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Stephen

Friday, March 17, 2006 at 11:46pm

You’re right Nobleizer and I agree, the Sun certainly has more sway in the UK than MySpace.

But from an online point of view, surely it would be MySpace doing the Sun a favour? Particularly, if MySun accounts are open to anyone in the world - allowing anyone to comment on the Sun’s topics of the day via their MySun webpage.

However, the more I think about your comment, the more I believe they’re probably doing each other a favour.

As it says in the Guardian piece, it’s still in the early stages, so it will be interesting to see what kind of model they use.

Either way, Mr Murdoch is looking happy.

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prblogger.com » Blog Archive » What does the future hold for the regional press?

Tuesday, February 12, 2008 at 3:32pm

[...] However, then take a look at how the nationals are changing their model. You’ve got the Guardian pioneering new grounds, the Times introducing a TV channel and heading off to the US and even the Sun (Britain’s largest newspaper) collaborating with MySpace (apparently). They’re predicting a change - a big change - so they’re acting accordingly. [...]

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