Consumer agency backs payment of $35-$70 per complaint after autioneer’s Korean subsidiary tells most of its 20M users of data breach.
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Despite recent weakness, there's ‘no desire to sell off search business,’ Diller says; cash headed back to shareholders.
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Former editor of Vanity Fair and New Yorker puts print aside to launch Internet site funded by Barry Diller's IAC.
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Speaking at a Goldman Sachs conference in New York City, IAC chief Barry Diller says company's cash cushion is unlikely to go toward acquisitions. But he has something for sale: a stake in his Japanese shopping channel.
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Barry Diller’s conglomerate, which includes Ask.com, Match.com and Ticketmaster, to dissolve in 5-way spin-off.
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HSN and mortgage unit Tree.com take charges; no spending spree with $1.3B, Diller says.
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Restructuring charges tied to pending breakup and mortgage-unit woes eat into results.
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Restrictions in place until March trial on control of the company and fate of CEO Barry Diller, report says.
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Parent of Ask.com, Ticketmaster, LendingTree, and HSN flattens structure in advance of planned breakup.
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Diller slams Liberty Media's bid to oust him, as media moguls clash over terms of a plan to split company into five pieces. See also: Diller's Online Empire
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Sorry, Microsoft. In race to grab Internet real estate, Google locks in IAC ads. The search and ad king nabs exclusive access to provide advertising across the IAC network of web sites.
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Analyst says Yahoo’s Panama will boost online local search ad market’s advantage over print.
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Plots expansion after eBay punches StubHub’s ticket.
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IAC/InterActiveCorp unit acquires sites in France and China.
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Parent company IAC/InterActive hopes better local search will drive ad sales.
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Barry Diller says his company, IAC/InterActiveCorp, will expand its reach into online news.
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Search king’s stock passed high-water mark as it captures 45.4 percent of the search market.
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Search engines vie to provide their features everywhere—even on each other’s sites.
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Internet conglomerate reports strong ticket and advertising sales.
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Portal takes on Google and Yahoo, claiming its cell phone search technology speeds access to information.
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