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Fast Company David Lumb |
Watch Your Back, Facebook: Twitter's Testing Video Autoplay Too Don't be startled by the cacophony suddenly emanating from your Twitter feed: The company started testing video autoplay yesterday, according to Advertising Age |
Fast Company David Lumb |
The Other Shoe Drops: Facebook May Soon Host News Sites' Content Inside Facebook Facebook is more interested in hosting the things media companies make than just spreading them and it sees Facebook-hosted video as an example of the solution. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Can Twitter Help Power Foursquare's Future? Twitter joins the likes of Pinterest, Waze, and Flickr on the list of services pulling rich location data from Foursquare's API. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Facebook's Quest To Overtake Your Phone Aims Right For The Dialer Rather than building devices or developing a full-fledged operating system, Facebook is going a more subtle route: nabbing chunks of your attention span, one app at a time. |
Fast Company Samantha Cole |
Facebook Sued For Gender Discrimination Former Facebook employee Chia Hong is taking the social network to court for alleged gender discrimination, racial discrimination, and sex harassment, in a lawsuit filed Monday. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
As Snapchat Explodes, Another Executive Flees Emily White, the seasoned Silicon Valley executive hired as Snapchat's COO in 2013, is leaving the company, according to Re/code. |
Fast Company David Lumb |
Alibaba Rumored To Invest $200 Million In Snapchat Chinese online megamarket Alibaba is in negotiations to invest $200 million in Snapchat, according to Bloomberg. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Snapchat Wants To Be Your New Favorite Sports Channel Snapchat wants to become a full-blown media outlet, complete with its own web TV series. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Think Wikipedia Is Sexist? They Want To Pay You To Help Change That A United Nations University study from 2010 found that only 13% of Wikipedia's editors are female, while other surveys have yielded an even lower number. |
Information Today March 3, 2015 |
Monster Makes It Easier for Employers to Find Job Seekers Monster Social Job Ads is now commercially available for customers in the U.S. after a successful November 2014 beta launch with companies such as eBay, GEICO, and T-Mobile USA, Inc. |
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