Rupert Murdoch scraps proposal to combine Fox, News Corp

Rupert Murdoch, chairman of News Corp and co-chairman of 21st Century Fox, arrives at the Sun Valley Resort of the annual Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference, July 10, 2018 in Sun Valley, Idaho. (AFP)
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Updated 25 January 2023
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Rupert Murdoch scraps proposal to combine Fox, News Corp

  • Murdoch proposed reuniting his media empire last fall, arguing that together the publishing and entertainment companies he split apart in 2013 would give the combined company greater scale in news, live sports and information, sources said

LONDON: Rupert Murdoch withdrew a proposal to re-unite News Corp. and Fox Corp, indicating that he and his son Lachlan Murdoch, Fox Corp’s head, determined that a combination of the companies was “not optimal” for shareholders, according to a regulatory filing on Tuesday.
The deal would have reunited the media empire Murdoch split nearly a decade ago.
No offer was exchanged between News Corp. and Fox Corp. before merger deliberations were abandoned, according to sources familiar with the process, who said pushback from News Corp. shareholders played a role in those plans being scrapped.
Murdoch proposed reuniting his media empire last fall, arguing that together the publishing and entertainment companies he split apart in 2013 would give the combined company greater scale in news, live sports and information, sources said.
Several people close to the Murdochs viewed the effort to reunite the media companies as driven by the 91-year-old Murdoch’s succession planning to consolidate power behind Lachlan, a notion the company described as “absurd” in November.
Some of News Corp’s larger shareholders, including Independent Franchise Partners and T. Rowe Price balked at the idea.
In a letter to News Corp. employees on Tuesday, News Corp. Chief Executive Robert Thomson said, “In my note to you in October, I said the Special Committee assessment would have no impact on our current operations; that was indeed the case, and remains so following today’s announcement.”

 


Amazon’s AWS reports outage after UAE datacenter struck by ‘objects’

Updated 02 March 2026
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Amazon’s AWS reports outage after UAE datacenter struck by ‘objects’

  • AWS confirmed sparks and fire after objects hit UAE data center causing disruptions to Emirate and Bahrain regions
  • Full recovery ‌expected to “be many hours away”

LONDON: Amazon’s cloud-computing facilities in the Middle East faced power and connectivity issues on Monday after unidentified “objects” struck its data center in the United Arab Emirates.
The objects had triggered a fire on Sunday that forced authorities to eventually cut power to two clusters of Amazon data centers in the UAE, with restoration expected to take several more hours, according to Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) status page.
Localized power issues impacted AWS services ‌in both ‌the UAE and neighboring Bahrain, according to the ​page. ‌Abu ⁠Dhabi Commercial Bank ​said ⁠its platforms and mobile app were unavailable due to a region-wide IT disruption, although it did not directly link the outage to the AWS incident.
While Amazon did not identify the objects, the incident happened on the same day Iran fired a barrage of drones and missiles at Gulf States in retaliation for US and Israeli strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
A ⁠strike, if confirmed, on the AWS facility in ‌the UAE will mark the first time a ‌major US tech company’s data center has been ​knocked offline by military action. ‌It could also raise questions around Big Tech’s pace of expansion in ‌the region.
US tech giants have been positioning the UAE as a regional hub for artificial intelligence computing needed to power services such as ChatGPT. Microsoft said in November it plans to bring its total investment in the UAE to $15 billion by ‌the end of 2029 and will use Nvidia chips for its data centers there.
“In previous conflicts, regional ⁠adversaries such as ⁠Iran and its proxies targeted pipelines, refineries, and oil fields in Gulf partner states. In the compute era, these actors could also target data centers, energy infrastructure supporting compute, and fiber chokepoints,” Washington-based think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies said last week.
Microsoft as well as Google and Oracle — both of which also operate facilities in the UAE — did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.
AWS said a full recovery from the issues was expected to “be many hours away” for both UAE and Bahrain.
The outage had disrupted a dozen core cloud services and the company ​advised customers to back up ​critical data and shift operations to servers in unaffected AWS regions.