Appeals Court Deals Blow to 'Hot News' Doctrine
A federal appeals court cleared the way Monday for a financial-news website to publish stock market analysts’ private buy and sell recommendations in near-real time, striking a blow to a century-old legal doctrine that gave media companies control over the time-sensitive news they report.
The 4-year-old litigation, brought by Barclays Capital, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley and others, was premised on the so-called “hot news” doctrine the Supreme Court first recognized in 1918, in a lawsuit over the unauthorized and immediate republication of wire service reports. Monday’s ruling could deprive ...
How Online Companies Get You to Share More and Spend More
Zynga, Facebook, Apple, and many other online companies and services are refining techniques developed by game developers to keep you in their game.
Photo: Christopher Griffith; brain created by Megan Caponetto/Apostrophe
You’re not stupid, but you can be fooled. For millennia, the best salespeople have known how to exploit the vulnerabilities of the human mind. In the burgeoning field of behavioral economics, we’ve begun to give precise names to the mental weaknesses that make us all susceptible to a well-crafted pitch. Drawing on the insights of psychology, behavioral economists have e...
From iCloud to Dropbox: 5 Cloud Services Compared

Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Dropbox offer "cloud" services hosting data over the internet. (Photo: Extra Medium/Flickr)
With the recent announcement of iCloud, Apple joins Google, Amazon and Microsoft in their aggressive push into cloud computing, in a race to reel customers into their media ecosystems.
The general idea of the “cloud” is to store your media on the internet so you can access it from any device anywhere, as opposed to leaving it on a hard drive. Now with cloud services, we can juggle around our data between multiple gadgets.
Have music on your PC that you want to listen...