The tipoff came in a tweet. In an April meeting of the Senate Finance Committee, a tragically buttoned-up affair, the subject of the day was tariff policy. It would have remained an event only of conc
Rachel Kenny started listening to podcasts in 2015 — and quickly fell behind. "As I started subscribing to more and more podcasts, they started stacking up, and I couldn't keep up at normal speed," th
In your career as a geek, there’s a list of essential career intangibles. These are the things you need to do in order to be successful, which are also maddeningly difficult to measure. There is no di
Freeform Advertisers have fallen in love with the fantasy of buying ads aimed at exactly the right people on the web's "long tail." But that's not really how people consume media. Most people don't sp
America Loves Plausible Deniability Milo Yiannopoulos leaving a news conference in February. Credit... Lucas Jackson/Reuters In the end, which is where we live now, it turns out that America was broug
Economics Economics Indicators Central Banks Jobs Trade Tax & Spend Inflation & Prices Podcast The Crisis of Modern Day Capitalism Trade China’s Export Slump Eases as Economy Searches for Stability Ec
The end of the cycle One of the best essays written last year was Elad Gil’s End of Cycle? – referencing our most recent 2007-2017 run on mobile and web software, and the implications for investing, s
People-based marketing is a gold standard for marketers, because the targeted customers are definitively identified. Today, Acxiom’s data onboarding division, LiveRamp, and two leading ad tech firms,
Economics Economics Indicators Central Banks Jobs Trade Tax & Spend Inflation & Prices Central Banks Nagel Says ECB Should Be Open to Do More on Reserves Central Banks Lagarde Keeps ECB Rate Suspense,
Digiday @ Cannes June 19, 2017 • 2 min read • By Digiday Count The New York Times CEO Mark Thompson among those unhappy with the state of the digital ad market, beset by fraud, bots, bad ad placements
By Senior Editor INMA Dallas, Texas, USA Connect M ore than 50 news media executives from 14 countries traipsed throughout Manhattan by bus and on foot Thursday and Friday, visiting 21 media publisher