Time Warner Inc. has named Laura Lang, the head of its digital advertising firm Digitas, as the new CEO of Time Inc., the company’s magazine division, which is the largest in the world, and includes globally known titles such as Time, People, and Sports Illustrated.
Over two million United Kingdom public-sector workers are on a 24-hour strike against changes to the pension system.
WikiLeaks has delayed reopening its online drop box, after Julian Assange affirmed that he “re-engineered [it] from scratch.”
Egyptian citizens are lining up on the streets to vote in the country’s first free elections in decades – they’re electing members to the lower house of Parliament.
Pakistan is now accusing NATO of killing 28 soldiers in a helicopter raid on a military checkpoint in the northwest part of the country.
Syria is ignoring the Arab League’s ultimatum, as the 22-nation organization had given Syria 24 hours to agree to allow observers into the country or face possible economic sanctions.
The merger between AT&T and T-Mobile appears to be in jeopardy, as the two cellular phone giants have indicated that the deal hit a major stumbling block, as their merger application has been withdrawn from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
Regardless of ongoing protests in Tahrir Square, the Egyptian government affirms that elections will go ahead as planned, with parliamentary ballots scheduled for next week and a presidential one in June, 2012.
Netflix, Inc., (NASDAQ: NFLX), the American provider of on-demand internet streaming media in the United States, Canada, and Latin America and flat rate DVD-by-mail in the United States, has announced that it will raise $400 million in stock and convertible notes.
Warren Buffet is telling reporters that the European debt crisis has exposed serious problems in the seventeen-country Eurozone that the billionaire investor says will require radical changes to fix.