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Robert Thomson (executive)

Australian journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Thomson (executive)
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Robert James Dell’Oro Thomson (born 11 March 1961) is an Australian journalist and business executive. He has been the chief executive of News Corp since 2013.[1]

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Early life

Thomson was born in Torrumbarry, Victoria, and studied at Christian Brothers College in St Kilda East, and at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology.[2][3]

Career

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Thomson started work as a copyboy at The Herald (now the Herald Sun) in Melbourne in 1979.[4] In 1983, he became senior feature writer for The Sydney Morning Herald, and two years later became Beijing correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald as well as the Financial Times.[3] Thomson then became a Tokyo correspondent for the Financial Times in 1989.[5] Thomson was appointed the Financial Times foreign news editor in 1994[2] and in 1996 became editor of the Financial Times weekend edition.[3] While at Sydney Morning Herald, Thomson wrote a series on Australian judges, which was published as a book in 1987, The Judges: A Portrait of an Australian Judiciary.[6][7][8] In 1998, Thomson became U.S. managing editor of the Financial Times.[4]

In 2007, Thomson was one of the first media executives to criticise Google and big tech for the disaggregation of content and publication of falsehoods, and to pressure them for a higher share of advertising value.[9][10] He has been known to use alliterative expressions to call out those companies, such as platforms for "the fake, the faux and the fallacious", and "tech tapeworms."[9][11] Thomson called for new terms of trade for tech platforms to allow viable business models for creators and to benefit broader society.[12][13]

In May 2008, he was appointed managing editor of The Wall Street Journal, having previously been the editor of The Times.[14][15]

He received an honorary doctorate from RMIT University in 2010.[16]

In January 2013, Thomson became the chief executive of News Corp.[1]

In 2023, Thomson has decried the unauthorised use of journalistic content by generative AI and the resulting existential risk posed to media companies. Thomson and several other media leaders[17] have called for compensation by tech companies that are developing and employing AI. Speaking in May 2023 at INMA, a media conference, Thomson summed up the industry's outrage, saying "[media's] collective IP is under threat and for which we should argue vociferously for compensation."[18]  He said that AI was "designed so the reader will never visit a journalism website, thus fatally undermining that journalism."[19]

In June 2025, it was reported that News Corp had extended Thomson's contract as its chief executive until June 2030.[1]

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Personal life

One of his ancestors was named Arturo Dell'Oro, and came from Domodossola, in northern Italy.[20] He is married to Wang Ping, the daughter of a general in the Chinese People's Liberation Army.[21][22]

References

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