Internet advertising firm L90 Inc. on Monday said it would restate results for four prior quarters after an internal investigation in conjunction with a probe by securities regulators showed it overstated sales by $8.3 million over that period.
The Internet may be getting some respect, after two years of dissing. The number of Web companies that shut down or declared bankruptcy in April fell to 12, with anecdotal evidence the term "dot-com" can be spoken in polite company.
Allen H. Neuharth, who 20 years ago launched USA Today, the nation's largest-circulation daily, in defiance of predictions it would be a financial and journalistic flop, is now promoting another tough sell -- a weekend newspaper supplement for young children.
Forget the death of newspapers: The men running America's top chains say papers will survive the digital revolution.
Coverage outranks price, and m-commerce capability isn't a priority.
Bill Clinton is reportedly considering joining Oprah Winfrey, Regis Philbin and Jerry Springer in the world of daytime TV talk.
A new study finds that many advertisers aren't convinced that newspaper websites provide real value.
America Online, the world's largest online service provider, on Wednesday said Google will become its U.S. provider of the advertisements featured on online search display pages replacing Overture Services Inc.
True, there's a lot going wrong in online advertising — but a DoubleClick study suggests that marketers' perceptions are often worse than reality.
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