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InternetNews April 24, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
MySpace Names Van Natta CEO News Corp. and Fox Interactive waste little time in making DeWolfe's replacement official.  |
InternetNews April 24, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Vanity URLs a Perfect Fit for Facebook Facebook promised profitability. Is this how it's going to get there?  |
InternetNews April 24, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Facebook Adopting New Usage Policies Social networking site to ratify new governance policies to give users more control of their data, though some privacy advocates remain skeptical.  |
Search Engine Watch April 23, 2009 Sage Lewis |
Building Links by Building Trust I want to share one idea that you can act on right this very minute to help you with your link building. It might actually be the tool you need to push through the rest of this recession.  |
InternetNews April 22, 2009 Christopher Saunders |
MySpace CEO DeWolfe Out News Corp. aims to bring in new blood to liven up MySpace as rival Facebook grows ever more popular.  |
InternetNews April 22, 2009 David Miller |
Wikipedia's Wales Urges Ad Buyers to Get Buying Jimmy Wales makes the pitch for advertising alongside user-generated content - and takes a swipe at social media.  |
Home Theater April 21, 2009 |
YouTube Gets More Movies and TV Hundreds of movies and thousands of TV shows will appear legally on YouTube thanks to a deal involving the video site, Sony Pictures, and 11 other media companies.  |
InternetNews April 21, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
More Layoffs at Yahoo as Profits Fall 78% Yahoo is trimming costs in the face of continued slowdown in ad spending.  |
InternetNews April 21, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Yahoo Braces for More Layoffs Ahead of Earnings Yahoo could make deeper staff reductions as a search deal with Microsoft remains on the table.  |
The Motley Fool April 21, 2009 Tim Beyers |
Did Oprah Break Twitter? Twitter had a big week. In addition to Oprah's arrival on the service, last week saw Ashton Kutcher win a much-publicized race with CNN to 1 million Twitter followers, and a snarky bundle of code called Mikeyy attacked the increasingly popular service.  |
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