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    Friday, March 22, 2019

    Business In 1978 Xerox was ruled a monopoly, and Feds forced them to license nearly all their patents to several Japanese companies, taking their market share from 100% to 17%, effectively destroying one of America's great innovation stories overnight

    Business In 1978 Xerox was ruled a monopoly, and Feds forced them to license nearly all their patents to several Japanese companies, taking their market share from 100% to 17%, effectively destroying one of America's great innovation stories overnight


    In 1978 Xerox was ruled a monopoly, and Feds forced them to license nearly all their patents to several Japanese companies, taking their market share from 100% to 17%, effectively destroying one of America's great innovation stories overnight

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:28 PM PDT

    Sit within 25 feet of a low performer at work, performance declines by 30%.

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:56 AM PDT

    Garuda looks to scrap Boeing 737 Max order

    Posted: 22 Mar 2019 12:34 AM PDT

    Justice Department issues subpoenas in criminal investigation of Boeing

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 07:15 AM PDT

    Silicon Valley’s Grow-or-Die Business Culture Is Costing Us

    Posted: 22 Mar 2019 01:49 AM PDT

    How to get paid online

    Posted: 22 Mar 2019 01:47 AM PDT

    Hello, i'm making an online product, and i don't really use bank accounts, so i wonder if i could only start with Skrill and Paypal ? or will not accepting credit/debit card would be a huge hit to revenue ?

    submitted by /u/AlanRoofies
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    How Does HR Support Business Strategy?

    Posted: 22 Mar 2019 01:32 AM PDT

    3 Tips for Getting the Best Real Estate Agent

    Posted: 22 Mar 2019 12:39 AM PDT

    What blockchain platform is suitable for business in practical meaning TODAY?

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 12:02 PM PDT

    Fed holds line on rates, says no more hikes ahead this year

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:06 AM PDT

    5 Advanced Online Marketing Tips for Small Business

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 05:32 AM PDT

    How to get the business in software/IT industry with regular income.

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 07:15 PM PDT

    Please lead me in this path.

    submitted by /u/vimaljaingoyal
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    Hyundai shareholders reject Elliott's $6.2 bln dividend request

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:55 PM PDT

    the largest problem media platforms have is due to a lack of regulation and trust.

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:47 PM PDT

    I would like it to be known to people in /r/business that the fundamental problem all online platforms is having a public trust and it limits all these platforms from infinitely grow their revenue.

    Just to preface I think Elizabeth Warren's ideas are terrible and will force the US economy into a bitter recession unnecessarily just to make a political point.

    I generally feel safe driving a new car because I know there are many laws that mandate the production/quality standards to automobiles so that it doesn't blow up or randomly lose control at least 99% of the time.

    I feel safe passenging on an airplane (planes outside the 737 max 8) because I know many of these companies treat most of the general public's safety seriously enough so that they won't be sanctioned by governments.

    But when it comes to Amazon, Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Disney, or fuck Comcast...

    What have they done to really deserve trust? They allow each other (fuck Comcast) to rape our data and sell it to the next person. And to make matters worse, when people's private information is stolen from these platforms....

    No shit rolls down hill and no hell is raised, instead they all hide behind a ludicrously long multifaceted terms of service that very often don't exactly describe the entire terms (Facebook/Google/eBay in a nutshell) we are signing up for.

    I completely understand why everyone would be mad and want laws that enforce more legal scrutiny.

    As far as I can see it until anything changes, trust to them is just a marketting or sales product, not a legally mandated requirement. So I don't really need to spend more serious amounts of money for personal use.

    submitted by /u/AsianWaffle
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    MillerCoors sues Anheuser-Busch over Bud Light corn syrup Super Bowl ad

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:41 PM PDT

    To fund Y Combinator’s top startups, VCs scoop them before Demo Day

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:27 PM PDT

    Business Question

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 06:25 PM PDT

    Hi guys, i want to know if somebody can tell my an online website to buy grocery things but big counts and cheap, to import it, if somebody knows want i will appreciated.

    I also need a big big big seller of nuts, all kind of nuts to import it also.

    submitted by /u/Noxphyro
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    Levi Strauss shares soar in IPO

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 09:38 AM PDT

    UK commercial real estate investment volumes reach £62.1bn in 2018 - CRE Herald

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 03:22 PM PDT

    How Amazon and Walmart are putting robots to work behind the scenes

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 02:57 PM PDT

    Gucci "distressed" sneakers sell for $870, look like "something you'd buy at Goodwill"

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 02:46 PM PDT

    Marketint made easy

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 02:16 PM PDT

    Survey: 95% of Small Businesses Will Increase Their Digital Marketing Spending in 2019

    Posted: 21 Mar 2019 01:23 PM PDT

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