Online portal, buffeted by competition from Google and Yahoo, plans asset sale after failing to find buyer.
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eMarketer predicts growth in U.S. online advertising will shrink to single digits in 2009
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Amid the deluge of bad economic news, a positive outlook for Internet advertising offers some hope.
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French Internet provider's shares drop despite a 30 percent rise in revenue.
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Transformation. Paradigms Tossed. Out With the Old. Microsoft's embrace of "the cloud" is just a sign of the latest upheaval in tech -- and it's right on schedule.
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Software giant joins rivals on proposing services via the Internet. Azure OS would also mesh existing applications with web services.
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Initial reaction of tech firms favors a government plan to speed up broadband access,convert to digital TV and protect digital rights.
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Yahoo and eBay may fare worse than Google, but analyst cuts estimates across the board.
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Now that he’s on Yahoo board, activist will wear legal shackles, VC eminence grise and HuffPost columnist says.
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America’s 70-year love affair with traditional TV is still growing strong, according to a report, but the tube could take a massive ad hit because of the slowing U.S. economy.
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There are other perspectives of the tech world beyond Silicon Valley. The view from other countries can be insightful. Here's a quick roundup of today's news.
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Now that a deal is off, both companies need to rethink their strategies.
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With local advertisers departing, radio conglomerate spins off its web services division as a quick Internet fix for local media.
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Software giant says it is fully committed to the Internet.
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Gamers will be able to make free Internet phone calls over the handheld machine.
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Attempt to block video seen as insulting to Islam triggered global shutdown of social networking site.
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He had a nice, methodical plan to roll out iPods and iPhones and keep the music business under this thumb. Then came the hackers.
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Let the fireworks begin. Microsoft will mount a proxy fight for control of the Yahoo board, The New York Times reports.
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Nickelodeon, which brought the world SpongeBob SquarePants and Jimmy Neutron, buys Dutch-based parenting web sites.
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But poor countries still lag the wealthy, UN agency reports.
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