Showing results for: aol (page 16)
Your TV is watching you
Farhad Manjoo
Advertisers want to use new technology to monitor your every click -- and prevent you from tuning out their ads. And don't even think of trying to escape.
The Comcast shakedown
Chishen Wei
Flush with its purchase of AT&T Broadband, the biggest cable company on the block intends to make size matter.
The world press on the war
Compiled by Laura McClure
In Bush's postwar Iraq, a former CIA director with Israeli connections may head the Information Ministry.
Nightmare scenarios
Steven Brill
Would a dirty bomb make Washington uninhabitable? Would another terror offensive make civil liberties obsolete? The final installment from "After."
The Fix
Karen Croft
Tom Hanks and Armani say no to the Oscars, Liz says "ciao" to Hollywood, and we get a sneak peek of "Matrix" sequel.
Going downhill fast
Tina Brown
Gathering at the elite Deer Valley ski retreat, the newly humbled masters of the universe bemoan the Bush economy but express high hopes for his war.
Joe Conason’s Journal
Salon Staff
Page Six wrongly suggests that New York Times writer Adam Cohen and Miguel Estrada are old rivals. Plus: French toast is American.
Back to the boards
Liesl Schillinger
In an increasingly flat-screen world, stars like Al Pacino and Gwyneth Paltrow look to theater for a human connection. Will the rest of us follow?
Hollywood’s “destination actor” challenge
Tina Brown
What happened to primping, galas and fornication?
Why Hollywood just doesn't know how to live large anymore.
AOL’s Jekyll and Hyde act
Farhad Manjoo
The world's biggest Internet provider is also the world's biggest media company. As the entertainment industry prosecutes users who share music, will AOL take a stand?
The dish on Liz Smith
Tina Brown
Why she celebrates her birthday in a room packed with friends -- and Matt Drudge probably celebrates his all alone. Plus: The Time AOL wars are over, and everybody lost.
Embrace file-sharing, or die
John Snyder, Ben Snyder
A record executive and his son make a formal case for freely downloading music. The gist: 50 million Americans can't be wrong.
The Severance Kings
Tina Brown
Media moguls find life much rosier in the unemployment line. Plus: The Golden Globes at a safe distance.
Letters
Salon Staff
A dissenting view on AOL's ex-chairman: A reader responds to Andrew Leonard's "Steve Case: Brilliant Visionary or Fumbling Clod."
Steve Case: Brilliant visionary or fumbling clod?
Andrew Leonard
I don't know -- I'll have to check AOL's stock price and get back to you.
A year to forget
Andrew Leonard, Farhad Manjoo, Katharine Mieszkowski
Enron, WorldCom, United; the war between Hollywood and Silicon Valley; a droopy stock market; and more, more, more spam. 2002 was not a whole lot of fun in the world of business and technology.
Catfight brewing!
Amy Reiter
Rosie disses J.Lo as all booty and no talent; Russell Crowe to surrender bachelorhood in a tsunami of bubbly.
Replay it again, Sam
Farhad Manjoo
Personal video recorders already have Hollywood running scared. Now Microsoft is pushing a new computer that will make trading TV shows as easy as using ... Napster.
A front-row seat at war
Gary Kamiya
HBO's "Live From Baghdad" is the story of one of live journalism's finest hours -- and a cautionary tale for an increasingly docile press.
Guns, lies and the Internet in South Carolina
Farhad Manjoo
Field & Stream's Web site was associated with a voter's guide accusing a Democratic Senate candidate of being anti-gun. One problem: He's a member of the NRA.
“Oh! My God!”
King Kaufman
The Giants and Angels don't seem able to play a dull World Series game. Even the participants have been amazed so far.
Saving AOL
Farhad Manjoo
The online giant's woes are legion. Will new software and a bet on broadband come to the rescue?
Riding along with the Internet Bookmobile
Richard Koman
Angered by a law that extends copyright terms for 20 years, a crusader named Brewster Kahle wants to use the Internet to make books available to everyone.
Gut check time for corporate America
Arianna Huffington
The outrage over Jack Welch's retirement package is more than just a public post-Enron temper tantrum.
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