🔊CEOInterviews

Robert Thomson on intellectual property protection

From News Corp ($NWSA) Q3 2026 Earnings Call · · Castify Earnings Call

“Separately, we are tracking a number of dodgy digital firms scraping illicitly, illegally our precious content and shamelessly reselling this perlloined property. We have these baleful bad boy bots in our sites and intend to pursue them vigorously. And it should be noted carefully, we believe companies which willingly buy this stolen content from these nefarious fences are also culpable.”

Controversial intellectual property protectionAI scrapinglegal action

On , Robert Thomson, CEO & Director at News Corp Class A, spoke about intellectual property protection during News Corp ($NWSA) Q3 2026 Earnings Call on Castify Earnings Call.

News Corp ($NWSA) Q3 2026 Earnings Call
Watch on YouTube at 5:11
News Corp ($NWSA) Q3 2026 Earnings Call
Castify Earnings Call
Watch on YouTube at 5:11
Robert Thomson

About Robert Thomson

CEO & Director · News Corp Class A

On News Corp’s Q2 and Q3 fiscal 2026 earnings calls, Thomson described the company as an “AI inputs company,” citing recent deals with Meta and OpenAI as partnerships that he said would have a positive impact on revenue and profitability. He stated that AI engines require “contemporary creative proprietary content” and that News Corp is negotiating further deals with companies that recognize the value of its content. Thomson also said the company is tracking entities that he alleged are “scraping illicitly, illegally” News Corp’s content and reselling it, and that the company intends to pursue them vigorously. Thomson reported that Realtor.com’s revenues rose 15% in Q3 despite a sluggish U.S. housing market, and that digital real estate segment revenues grew 8% year-over-year in Q2. He noted that Dow Jones saw digital advertising revenue rise 12% in Q2 to a record high. On the topic of AI, Thomson argued that “AI is retrospective” and that News Corp’s content is only accessed if AI companies pay for it, adding that “without compelling content, these AI operators are not omnipotent.” He also referenced a $1.5 billion agreement by Anthropic to pay for using pirated books, stating that Harper Collins expects to receive its “fair share” of that payout.

Profile compiled from Robert Thomson's verified public interviews and appearances. See all quotes & transcripts →

More from Robert Thomson News Corp (Class A) (NWSA) Full Transcript Explore All Executives