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The BBC Trust may have a wider role to play in reallocating licence fee money to other content providers if this becomes the preferred option for protecting public service broadcasting, according to Ofcom chief Ed Richards.
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With more and more teenagers spurning traditional media, we asked the broadcaster’s commissioning editor Matt Locke about how it is planning to reach them through digital services.
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Occasional ads in the Twitter timeline, in a similar fashion to what Twitteriffic users currently see (Twitteriffic runs their own ads on the free version) seems like the only real way to monetize Twitter, aside for premium subscriptions.
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I think many of us has come to a point where technology is making us less productive. Think of how many emails coming in your mailbox and how often your browser distract at work. I think people were kind of feeling guilty 5-7 years back when they are brow
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Apture says it’s created the “next generation news experience”, one that you can try out starting today on the Washington Post’s blogs The Fix and Celebritology.
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I believe that a blog with 50,000 loyal, repeat visitors is much more valuable to the publisher, advertisers — everyone on the business side — than a blog that has sensational posts that bring in 100,000 one-time visitors for entertainment snacks who
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While online advertising will probably suffer if there is a recession, I predict search will be the last place from which marketers pull their ad dollars. Why? Paid search is accountable, efficient, and built on a cost-controlled model, making it the most
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You know what I really hate? When dozens or hundreds of people work hard to build a town, and then some – sniff! – mere cartographer – comes along and turns their work into a dot on a map.
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I don’t know of a worse sign for an industry’s future than that it starts asking for government subsidies (Techdirt). But that’s apparently what Frank Blethen, president of the Seattle Times company, is proposing.