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Nov 9, 2019
11/19
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lucas shaw, thank you for joining us.oming up, we head to wired 25 to catch up with wired editor nick thompson. and if you like bloomberg news check us out on the radio. listen on the bloomberg app, bloomberg.com and on sirius xm in the u.s. this is bloomberg. ♪ >> facebook employees repeatedly chafed at what they viewed as unethical practices by the company, internal district of columbia qumets showed. those concerns voiced in 2012 and 2013 were overruled by senior managers including mark zuckerberg who argued the survival of the social network as more important. we're joined by wired editor-in-chief nick thompson. from wired 25, the company's conference here in san francisco. thank you for joining us. >> glad to be here. >> so much to discuss and you have written some great features about facebook other the last few years. let's start with political advertising and the company's position that private companies should not be policing public speech. do you agree and do you think it will sustain? >> there so many layers to
lucas shaw, thank you for joining us.oming up, we head to wired 25 to catch up with wired editor nick thompson. and if you like bloomberg news check us out on the radio. listen on the bloomberg app, bloomberg.com and on sirius xm in the u.s. this is bloomberg. ♪ >> facebook employees repeatedly chafed at what they viewed as unethical practices by the company, internal district of columbia qumets showed. those concerns voiced in 2012 and 2013 were overruled by senior managers including...
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Nov 12, 2019
11/19
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rickore, we are joined by springfield and bloomberg's lucas shaw.re the technical glitches perhaps a good sign, showing that demand exceeded expectation? rick: i have no idea. the reality is that technical glitches are sort of commonplace in big launches. you side with hbo and game of thrones. maybe it was demand driven. who really knows. it is irrelevant in the scheme of this is disney's long-term strategy. bob iger has thrown down the gauntlet. it is not even just about disney plus. fx content. as long as these technical issues are not ongoing, as long as you are not still hearing about technical issues 2, 3 weeks from now, no one will hear about the issues this morning. taylor: did disney cement itself as a clear, formidable competitor to netflix and the like? lucas: i think so, and it has for a long time now. if you ask people in the entertainment business, silicon valley, wall street, most have viewed disney plus as the most competitive of the new services. max are muchbo further out. disney is the largest entertainment company in the world. fr
rickore, we are joined by springfield and bloomberg's lucas shaw.re the technical glitches perhaps a good sign, showing that demand exceeded expectation? rick: i have no idea. the reality is that technical glitches are sort of commonplace in big launches. you side with hbo and game of thrones. maybe it was demand driven. who really knows. it is irrelevant in the scheme of this is disney's long-term strategy. bob iger has thrown down the gauntlet. it is not even just about disney plus. fx...
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Nov 13, 2019
11/19
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field andch green lucas shaw, thank you both for joining us.oming up, music video app tictoc is gearing up to take on washington as it seeks a new u.s. policy chief. we break down the story, next. and if you like bloomberg news, check us out on the radio. you can listen on the bloomberg app, bloomberg.com, and in the u.s., on sirius xm. this is bloomberg. ♪ taylor: microsoft is among the plaintiffs in the case is viewed by the u.s. supreme court tuesday over the so-called daca program. this is defending its employees who were brought to the u.s. is undocumented children. the deferred action for childhood arrivals program 700,000 --rly 700,000 qualified immigrants were in the u.s. illegally from deportation. it is being challenged by the trump administration. microsoft president brad smith argues that the affected immigrants, were called dreamers, are an essential source of talent that microsoft depends on. other companies like google, ibm, apple and amazon have filed legal documents saying that ending daca will hurt the u.s. economy. a decision
field andch green lucas shaw, thank you both for joining us.oming up, music video app tictoc is gearing up to take on washington as it seeks a new u.s. policy chief. we break down the story, next. and if you like bloomberg news, check us out on the radio. you can listen on the bloomberg app, bloomberg.com, and in the u.s., on sirius xm. this is bloomberg. ♪ taylor: microsoft is among the plaintiffs in the case is viewed by the u.s. supreme court tuesday over the so-called daca program. this...
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Nov 8, 2019
11/19
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we are joined by bloomberg's lucas shaw. a great article by your colleague gerry smith about this topic. sharingus about account and how big of a hit is it for netflix and cable companies? >> it costs the tv business somewhere between $5 billion in $10 billion. if you think about netflix, there are estimates that at least 10% of users are using someone's password. and you areath looking at billions of dollars .n just netflix alone the challenge here is fixing this in a way that is consumer friendly so you're not asking customers to enter in their passwords every day or every week. what are the techniques available to these companies were they don't end up harassing people? >> a couple of the techniques are making you change your password pretty regularly to make sure friends cannot just store the password. i have a password to someone else's service that i've had for years and it has not changed. regularly,nged it they may not be able to access anymore. a also talked about two factor authentication where you get a text messa
we are joined by bloomberg's lucas shaw. a great article by your colleague gerry smith about this topic. sharingus about account and how big of a hit is it for netflix and cable companies? >> it costs the tv business somewhere between $5 billion in $10 billion. if you think about netflix, there are estimates that at least 10% of users are using someone's password. and you areath looking at billions of dollars .n just netflix alone the challenge here is fixing this in a way that is...
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Nov 26, 2019
11/19
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taylor: bloomberg's lucas shaw on the streaming wars. thank you for joining us.of all of these new media companies, there is a new integrated platform, it's the result between networks. the new venture claims over 2 million registered e- sports players and reaches 100 million monthly active users. in new york to tell us more, tom rogers, he was the c.e.o. of tivo and the president of what used to be nbc cable and he will be the executive chairman of the new endeavor. tom, great to have you. what does the company look like in your eyes, it's a merger of three different companies coming altogether? tom: it's the antidote for what lucas was talking about. as the entertainment world moves to streaming, you have the big question, it means that there will be more and more cord cutting, more and more decline of traditional linear television and what people expect will be left of live tv as entertainment television goes elsewhere is news and sports. that raises a major issue, how do news and sports drive new sources of revenue as a subscription fees that came from cable
taylor: bloomberg's lucas shaw on the streaming wars. thank you for joining us.of all of these new media companies, there is a new integrated platform, it's the result between networks. the new venture claims over 2 million registered e- sports players and reaches 100 million monthly active users. in new york to tell us more, tom rogers, he was the c.e.o. of tivo and the president of what used to be nbc cable and he will be the executive chairman of the new endeavor. tom, great to have you....