- China is proposing that under-18s be banned from hosting live streams (Tech Crunch)
- Last week Amazon ousted thousands of merchants, so what’s a vendor to do? (Recode)
- Google reportedly wants to muscle its way into the video game scene with a new streaming service and hardware (Windows Central)
- It will take deep pockets to fight Netflix, but is anyone besides Disney up to the task? (Bloomberg)
- Even if you aren’t on TikTok, the app is going to change the way all social media works (The New York Times)
- Disney is reportedly ending its “vault” system of releasing movies, with plans to put its entire catalogue on Disney+ (The Verge)
- Is it time to say goodbye to the shared-universe franchise? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Kid influencers are major money makers, but should someone under 13 even be allowed to be an influencer? (The New York Times)
- How brands are handling memes, doxxing and doctored content online (Digiday)
- Studios change tactics to take down trolls before the trolls can take down a movie (Bloomberg)
- Why Nickelodeon did away with upfronts and went for good, old-fashioned meetings instead (Adweek)
- YouTube is driving most toy trends right now, so how can companies take advantage of that? (Forbes)
- After two years of controversy, Facebook is shifting focus from public posts to encrypted messages (The Verge)
- How Fox employees are preparing for life under Disney (Variety)
- AT&T’s new personnel shuffles are really about preparing for the Netflix era, according to its CEO (Bloomberg)
- Google’s newest speech-recognition venture is actually about teaching kids in India how to read (VentureBeat)
- Nintendo offers users the chance pay to upgrade mobile games, but its new message is “don’t spend too much” (Wall Street Journal)
- Disney’s board cuts US$13.5 million from Bob Iger’s pay following the Fox acquisition (Bloomberg)
- Mobile makers bank on pricey foldable phones to heat up a cooling smartphone market (Wall Street Journal)
- Why digital powerhouses Rhett and Link spent US$10 million to buy Smosh after Defy folded (The Hollywood Reporter)
- New research suggests that social media stars could be influencing kids to eat more (CBS News)
- Quick recap from this weekend: Steven Spielberg is trying to get Netflix kicked out of the Oscars, now Netflix is hitting back (Variety)
- …That battle could have major ramifications for indies on Hollywood’s biggest night (IndieWire)
- Upfronts are looming, but many networks are unsure of what’s next since the Disney-Fox deal still hasn’t closed (AdWeek)
- Unsurprisingly, unboxing, influencers and nostalgia are among the biggest toy industry trends for 2019 (Forbes)
- In the wake of the Momo hoax, it’s probably worth reading up on how to not fall for viral scams (WIRED)
- Turner head David Levy plans to exit WarnerMedia amid reorg (Deadline)
- Part of that reorg combines HBO and Turner under one leader, but why exactly is that the plan? (Variety)
- How animated features are taking on the concept of what it means to be a “good man” (The Hollywood Reporter)
- TikTok is letting under-13s stay on its platform, despite record lawsuit, but they can’t post videos anymore (The Verge)
- Disney is reportedly in talks to buy out AT&T’s stake in Hulu (The Verge)
- For Facebook to take a chunk of the TV-ad pie, it’s going to need to act more like a broadcaster (Digiday)
- Does TikTok’s record US$5.7-million fine from the US Federal Trade Commission signal that the era of collecting kids data is over? (Fortune)
- With all of its recent success, why does Nintendo keep returning to its classics? (CNN)
- This year, more than half of US households will have an Amazon Prime membership, but are they watching content? (eMarketer)
- How publishers are tweaking strategies on Snapchat to keep people tuned into the app (Digiday)
- It’s not all about the latest tech offering—the toys of the 1980s are making a major comeback (Gizmodo)
- Implementing 5G is going to change more than just your own phone (Wall Street Journal)
- Roku’s platform head talks about why the ROI for OTT beats linear (Digiday)
- How virtual and augmented reality are slowly becoming more integrated in our everyday lives (The New York Times)
- Mattel163, Mattel’s new joint-venture with NetEase, sheds light on the toyco’s future plans (Games Industry)
- Is the era of Fortnite over? The game’s revenue dropped 48% in January (Tech Crunch)
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