Ken Auletta News
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Ken Auletta, author and New Yorker writer, says the public has yet to find out the extent of government surveillance on them. Auletta talks with Bloomberg's Tom Keene, Scarlet Fu and Alix Steele on Bloomberg Radio's "Bloomberg Surveillance."
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Business Insider Inc., the news site co-founded by former Internet analyst Henry Blodget, raised $5 million in venture capital from investors led by Amazon.com Inc. Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos.
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With so many business books spilling from the shelves, we’re often asked for a comprehensive list of recommendations. Here’s an updated list of 50 top titles published since Jan. 1, 2009.
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With so many business books spilling from the shelves, we’re often asked for a comprehensive list of recommendations. Here’s an updated list of 50 top titles published since Jan. 1, 2009.
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Google Inc. co-founder Larry Page will become chief executive officer, taking the reins from Eric Schmidt , who oversaw the transformation of a barely profitable startup with 200 employees into the owner of the world’s most- used search engine, with $29 billion in sales last year .
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Charlie Rose, Nov. 5: A discussion about the future of books with former HarperCollins CEO and creator of digital publisher Open Road Jane Friedman, Tim O'Reilly of O'Reilly Media, author Jonathan Safran Foer and Ken Auletta of The New Yorker.
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Colm Kelleher and Paul J. Taubman, co-heads of Morgan Stanley’s biggest business, work on opposite sides of an ocean, disagree about strategy and share an enmity that has become the subject of company jokes.
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Google Inc.’s Eric Schmidt said he has no plans to leave the owner of the world’s largest search engine, dismissing speculation he’s considering a career in media or politics.
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The first Lehman Brother was a Jewish immigrant from the Bavaria of King Ludwig I, a despot whose tastes ran to mistresses and monasteries.
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Back in the 1970s, celebrities of all stripes, from President Jimmy Carter to Mother Teresa , would visit the South Bronx to shake their heads over how the greatest city in the U.S., or a significant part of it, all of a sudden looked like Berlin in 1945.
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