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May 12, 2008 8:05:19 AM CDT


Stories related to: online news

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8 Stories

  • April 2008
    • Daily Paper Dumps Print Edition for Web

      Daily Paper Dumps Print Edition for Web

      In an ominous sign of the times for printed news, a struggling 90-year-old Wisconsin daily newspaper is shutting down its daily print operation, but will continue to exist online, the New York Times reports. Most of the 18,000 current subscribers of Madison's afternoon Capital Times are switching to the city's bigger daily. More »

  • March 2008
    • Bad Credit News Means Good Tidings for Analysts

      Bad Credit News Means Good Tidings for Analysts

      The Bear Stearns crisis was bad news for many, but it was good news—or at least good business—for financial analysts at London-based Breaking Views. The credit crunch is increasing demand for the company’s financial insights, offered online and, through various partnerships, in print. Breaking Views is seizing the moment, courting more newspapers and offering free online columns, the Guardian reports. More »

  • January 2008
    • Slashdot Doesn't Digg Ron Paul

      Slashdot Doesn't Digg Ron Paul

      Social news sites like Digg don’t work, says Slashdot founder Rob Malda, and Ron Paul is Exhibit A. “A lot of these community news sites are all about Ron Paul,” Malda told the New York Times . “What that is really demonstrating is that you are seeing 1 or 2 percent of a community shaping where the whole community is going.” More »

    • Online Journal Readers Can't Put Wallets Away (Yet)

      Online Journal Readers Can't Put Wallets Away (Yet)

      Puncturing the hopes of thrifty web surfers everywhere, the Wall Street Journal will continue to charge for much of its online content, at least for now. New owner Rupert Murdoch's apparently unplanned announcement at the World Economic Forum in Davos came after months of dithering over whether to keep access mostly subscriber-only, reports the New York Times . More »

  • November 2007
    • With TV Cut Off, Pakistanis Turn to the Web

      With TV Cut Off, Pakistanis Turn to the Web

      When Pervez Musharraf imposed emergency rule, he turned off all news outlets but his own, but couldn't stop Pakistanis from flocking to the Internet for independent news. The website of private news outfit GEO-TV was so flooded by traffic that the channel had to upgrade servers and remove non-text content to allow 500,000 simultaneous visitors, the Christian Science Monitor reports. More »

  • October 2007
    • MSNBC Buys Out Online Indy News Site

      MSNBC Buys Out Online Indy News Site

      MSNBC will announce today its acquisition of online news site Newsvine, as the media giant attempts to revamp its image. While the move will only add 1 million monthly users to its already massive 29 million, Newsvine's user-generated content and annotated stories are expected to give MSNBC a leg up with competitors like Yahoo and CNN, the New York Times reports. More »

  • May 2007
    • Users Revolt After Digg Censors DVD Hackers

      Users Revolt After Digg Censors DVD Hackers

      Web 2.0 blogs are rushing to declare Digg dead, after a night in which the site's main page was saturated with its own obituaries. The web's most popular user-generated news site prompted a mutiny by removing posts revealing how to crack encrypted DVDs and HDs. Digg said the illegal posts put the site's survival at risk. More »

  • March 2007
    • News Wars

      News Wars

      From “infosnacking” to “hyperlocal” news, there is a whole new terminology describing the evolution of news, particularly the move to online news.  The PBS show Frontline has developed a four-part series that examines the ‘News Wars’ taking place all around us.  More »

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