Top 30 web properties in Europe
Google attracts the most web uses in Europe, but Facebook gets most of their time, according to new research from ComScore.
Google attracts the most web uses in Europe, but Facebook gets most of their time, according to new research from ComScore.
Across Europe, 365.3 million unique visitors went online in April 2011 for an average of 24.2 hours per person, according to new research from comScore.
Twitter has warned users that it is prepared to hand over their personal information to authorities if required by law, although it would notify them before they do so, following the recent controversy surrounding multiple breeches of gagging orders on the micro-blogging site.
In an ideal world of online advertising, the right message would reach the right person at the perfect time. In reality, however, this is not a simple task since filtering through millions of viewers to make the best match, while also factoring in their previous responses, is like finding a moving needle in a haystack. … [Read more…]
Internet advertising revenues in the U.S. hit $7.bn for the first quarter of 2011, a 23% increase over the same period in 2010, according to new research.
More than three quarters of journalists rate social media as an important professional tool, while almost 90% are using social media more than they were a year ago, according to new research from Daryl Willcox Publishing.
Yahoo! has reached an agreement with China’s Alibaba over online-payment business Alipay, Reuters reported, citing people close to the matter.
Yahoo! has reached an agreement with China’s Alibaba over online-payment business Alipay, Reuters reported, citing people close to the matter.
172 million U.S. Internet users watched online video content in April for an average of 14.9 hours per viewer, according to new research from comScore.
In the past year searches in Latin America surged 21 percent to more than 18.5 billion queries in March 2011, with the typical searcher conducting 167 queries during the month, according to new research.