This is a Rupert Murdoch angry that went against the attack Thursday against the "enemies" who accuse his media group News Corp. to have hacked his rivals, calling them "aristos and conservatives "finding their privileges of the last century.
Already weakened by the scandal of illegal wiretapping in Britain, News Corp. is in the center of new allegations made in Britain and Australia that a subsidiary of would have had the mission of promoting piracy of pay TV channels competing.
The Australian Financial Review reported Wednesday that News Corp. had made use of Operational Security, a subsidiary established in the mid 1990s, to sabotage its competitors. The Panorama program, broadcast earlier this week in Britain by the BBC, had already reported similar suspicions.
Operational Security was a branch of NDS, a subsidiary of News Corps specializes in signal encryption, a crucial activity for pay-TV channels.
News Corp. as NDS, exit from the orbit of the Murdoch group, pitted categorical denials to the allegations.
"It seems that each of our competitors and enemies accumulate lies and slander," wrote Rupert Murdoch on his Twitter account Thursday, adding that the response was being prepared and would be severe.
News Corp., whose activities span the spectrum of media and whose power is said to be able to make or break political careers, is subjected to very high criticism since the scandal broke wiretaps in Britain who notably led to the closure of the tabloid News of the World last summer.
But faced with these new charges, Murdoch, who confessed last July to a parliamentary committee having lived "the most humiliating day of his life", seems to have opted for a response from any other type .
Always on the microblogging site, he believes his "enemies have different aims" but they are "the worst old aristocrats and conservatives who want to preserve the status quo of the last century with their monopolies ". For a staunch Republican such as Murdoch, "aristo" comes under heavy insult.
THE BBC AND MAINTAIN THEIR AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW INFORMATION
But the BBC, which was repeatedly in trouble with BSkyB, whose News Corp. owns 39% stake, maintained Thursday the revelations of the magazine Panorama.
"We received the letter and have knowledge of NDS by News Corp's rejection of the revelations of Panorama. However, emails released this issue have not been manipulated, contrary to claims that NDS, and nothing (…) does not minimize the evidence released es in this issue, "said the public channel
. At the opposite, the Australian Financial Review, property group Fairfax Media, chief rival of Murdoch in the Australian press, has also maintained its information
. "Fully secured to the extraordinary investigation Neil Chenoweth, "the journalist who released the information, Michael Stutchbury, editor of the Australian Financial Review, said the newspaper was" in no way motivated by any desire either to harm a rival financial group that manages the Financial Review ". "We only cover a case and publish what we found," he said.
No evidence uncovered by the BBC as the Australian Financial Review to suggest that Murdoch or any senior executive of News Corp were not aware of practices lent to NDS.
According to the Australian Financial Review, Operational Security reportedly recruited hackers to decipher codes or access cards provided by pay TV competitors to their subscribers. These codes were then distributed on the black market via "yes cards" to monitor programs encrypted channels without paying a penny.
The Australian Financial Review, which suggests a shortfall amounting to millions of dollars, said particular rely on 14,400 emails retrieved from the hard drive of a laptop that used it Ray Adams, responsible for Europe NDS Operational Security from January 1996 to May 2002.
Monday, a report broadcast by the BBC as part of its documentary program Panorama has ensured that NDS hired a consultant to broadcast via its website access codes to ITV Digital, a competitor to Sky TV , chain that belonged to Murdoch.
ITV Digital, which has accumulated difficulties at launch (rivalry between shareholders, lack of flagship programs, price war with BSkyB), disappeared in 2002.