AOL paying for services for stock swaps
Unconventional business arrangements are coming home to roost for erstwhile Internet stars such as AOL Time Warner, with regulators zeroing in on bad barter deals.
Unconventional business arrangements are coming home to roost for erstwhile Internet stars such as AOL Time Warner, with regulators zeroing in on bad barter deals.
Amazon.com's CEO says it aims to be a source for anything you can buy, but not just a retailer. 'We're trying to invent something completely new.'
A big drop in stock prices has slowed the Internet acqusition frenzy.
Amazon has bought its first aircraft and is converting them from passenger to cargo planes.
ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das talks to Editor in Chief Larry Dignan and Senior Editor Sam Diaz about the financial health of Internet heavyweights, Google, Yahoo and Amazon. Dignan and Diaz share their views on Google's search business, Yahoo's prospects after Microsoft, and whether the current energy crisis is helping Amazon's online sales.
On the night of the historic U.S. presidential election, news outlets across the country streamed live video of the news coverage on their Web sites.
AWS CEO says a willingness to experiment has helped AWS grow faster than its e-commerce parent Amazon.
Some more thoughts on the uses of influence in measuring value in conversational markets.
The suspense is nearly over. In about an hour, Facebook will lift the veil on its plans to turn its social networking site into a platform that its makers hope becomes a pervasive ecosystem.
Technology companies fighting against changes in how stock options are expensed are battling the Federal Reserve Board, the U.S. Congress, investors and, now, each other.