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April 26, 2007

MySpace China says no to foreign interference

Rupert Murdoch’s wife Wendi may be on the board of MySpace China, but the way the new venture’s CEO tells it, the famously interventionist News Corp mogul will play next to no role in how it is run.

Local executives will be in full control of MySpace China’s operations, technology development and marketing, insisted CEO Luo Chuan on Thursday, ahead of the launch of a beta test version of the www.myspace.cn site.

Mr Luo says local management authority is the key to avoiding the setbacks suffered by other internet multinationals in China such as Ebay, Google, Microsoft and Amazon. While licencing MySpace’s technology and brand, the Beijing-based venture - a late entrant to a highly competitive market - will tailor its socialising service to Chinese tastes.

Since MySpace China is being coy about how big News Corp’s stake is (other investors include IDG and China Broadband Capital Partners) it is hard to know how seriously to take its talk of autonomy. Mr Luo did say MySpace founders Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson were alongside Wendy on the board.

But Mr Murdoch, deeply disappointed by his failure to build a significant media business in China despite years of trying, may be willing to take a hands-off approach.

"We have to make MySpace a very Chinese site," he said when he revealed MySpace’s ambitions in the country last year. "I have sent my wife across there because she understands the language."

2 Responses to “MySpace China says no to foreign interference”

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  1. Despite his right wing thoughts, Rupert is damn good businessman and leader, always believe in empowering management to run corresponding unit with full freedom and heard he is eyeing facebook and other social and web 2.0 phenomena, perhaps that help him to creep in highly regulated Chinese market

    Posted by: Shashank Garg | May 11th, 2007 at 11:44 am | Report this comment
  2. I think issues like this and net neutrality will really decide the future of IT. As much as business bandwidth grows and connectivity becomes more accessible, these overarching issues will decide the direction.

    http://t1-lines.net

    Posted by: Bosco Brand | May 31st, 2007 at 11:13 am | Report this comment

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