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Posts Tagged ‘news corp’
Sunday, March 29th, 2009
Reposted from Kara Swisher’s post at All Things D:
BoomTown has confirmed a report by Nikki Finke of Deadline Hollywood Daily that former AOL head Jon Miller is set to take over as digital head at News Corp., replacing Peter Levinsohn. (more…)
Tags: digital, fox, fox filmed entertainment, hulu, levinsohn, miller, news corp, zim Posted in fox | 1 Comment »
Sunday, May 18th, 2008
Despite its cliche, the question of “what is the next version of the web” provokes as intense a debate as you’ll find within digital circles. Web 3.0 definitions vary wildly with any number of partisan descriptions coming from very smart, yet fundamentally biased people.
These descriptions are all forward thinking, yet intrinsically flawed. They neglect that versioning, or defining the next version of the web, isn’t just about software or hardware. It’s about culture.
(more…)
Tags: eric schmidt, google, jerry yang, jonathan zittrain, mark cuban, myspace, news corp, reed hastings, sarah lacy, the corporate web, the future of the web and how to stop it, web 3.0, wikinomics, wikipedia, Yahoo Posted in Advertising, Business, Gift Culture, Reputation, Technology | 5 Comments »
Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Today, MySpace did something different.
Something bold.
Something sexy.
And like the one hot girl at the tech party, nobody knew how to handle it
Today’s MySpace announcement was totally misunderstood and mishandled by the press coverage. It was too hot to handle. (more…)
Tags: adam bain, Audience Network, ben worthen, CPMs, data availability, data portability, eBay, femme fatale, FIM, Flickr, myspace, New York Times, news corp, Sillicon Alley Insider, techcrunch, twitter, Yahoo Posted in Business | 1 Comment »
Saturday, April 5th, 2008
The news that Fox Interactive Media (FIM) was decentralizing, (as scooped by techcrunch and covered elsewhere) and carving out its individual brands, most notably MySpace and IGN, into standalone silos should be welcomed by the technology, creative and business communities.
This is the first step in a maturing process for intrinsically rebellious MySpace, which despite the multiple doom-and-gloom rants about its eminent demise, remains an 800 lb gorilla in the web ecosphere and will continue to do so as long as it moves towards independence from its corporate parent.
(more…)
Tags: adam bain, FIM, fragmentation vs aggregation, michael barrett, myspace, news corp, peter levinsohn, techcrunch Posted in Advertising, Business, News, Technology | 3 Comments »
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