‘Poison pill,’ share dilution irk eBay; Craigslist blog sees ‘conflicted shareholder’ and vows response to lawsuit.
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Natural language search engine hakia claims to provide more accurate results than Google. But analysts say the startup has a ways to go.
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NewsTrust.net, which rates news stories’ credibility instead of their popularity, plans to add a left-wing-right-wing breakdown in 2008.
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Social networks have roped in a majority of U.S. Internet users, but they still struggle to attract a steady influx of greenbacks from advertisers, says report from IDC.
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A job posting seems to confirm the rumors.
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Portal’s real estate site will roll out school ratings and social search tools.
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Funds are earmarked for product development and attacking Chinese and Indian markets.
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MyNewPlace aims to fill a vacancy in online apartment listings.
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LiveDeal hopes to get the newspapers to love the online classifieds industry.
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More sellers can accept payments as search giant challenges eBay's PayPal territory.
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An assortment of political and citizen action groups have begun a Sixties-style protest against AOL’s plan to charge for email.
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Search king tops Apple, Starbucks, and Skype in a survey as most influential brand.
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Losing ground to Taobao, eBay does an about-face on fees.
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The search giant is poised to jump into e-commerce with a service called Google Base.
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Seattle-based online recruiter says it doesn’t need more cash, but gets $19.5 million while the checkbooks are open.
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Subway flasher gets unwelcome attention from camera phone image, photo-sharing web sites, and mass media.
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Craigslist gains popularity; Lycos search engine losing steam; ‘Cyberchondriacs’ search online for health info.
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As revenue growth slows in other areas, big Internet companies take a lesson in success from sites like Craigslist.
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Piracy claims software dollars; Home buyers get smart; Consumers will choose MIMO access points.
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The week of August 9, 2004: Cisco throws a wet blanket, Blockbuster delivers, and Craigslist goes corporate.
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