- FAANG tech giants have all seen their value decline by 20% or more in recent months (Fortune)
- Instagram is cracking down on companies that sell fake likes (AdWeek)
- The creator of Netflix’s upcoming Maya and the Three gives insight into the SVOD’s new projects (Variety)
- Not surprisingly, Hulu’s CEO thinks streaming video will replace TV (Quartz)
- It’s official: Chinese regulators are the latest to approve the Disney-Fox merger (Rapid TV News)
- What is Disney spending more on than Marvel, Pixar and Lucasfilm combined? It’s not what you might think… (New York Times)
- YouTube quietly rolls out 100 ad-supported free movies (Tube Filter)
- Is bulking up on content going to be a winning strategy in the SVOD wars? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- It’s not just Instagram copying Snapchat anymore—WhatsApp takes a disappearing shot at the social app (TechCrunch)
- Paramount and Pocket.watch are teaming up to make a big-screen movie about unboxing (Tube Filter)
- Expanding its shopability, Instagram will now let users swipe up on videos (The Verge)
- Even as governments continue to be concerned about the company’s privacy issues, Huawei develops a voice assistant (CNBC)
- How a Bollywood music label grew a massive audience on YouTube and is about to out-perform PewDiePie (New York Times)
- It turns out all those random brands you’ve never heard of on Amazon are owned by…Amazon (New York Times)
- Parents expected to spend heavily on collectible mystery toys this holiday season (BBC News)
- Now that celebrities are on board, TikTok surpasses six million downloads in the US (The Verge)
- Lost original Oswald toon from Disney discovered in Japan (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Too little, too late? Inside Facebook’s plan to win back a young audience (Rolling Stone)
- Toys “R” Us Canada survived the bankruptcy, but its troubles aren’t over yet (Financial Post)
- Will the SVOD wars be good for consumers’ wallets? Netflix is reportedly looking at lowering prices (The Verge)
- Amazon isn’t just shaping how we shop—it’s also changing how those products look now (Gizmodo)
- Marvel Comics legend Stan Lee has died at 95 (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Voice tech makes money when people use it to buy things, so what will make them do that? (eMarketer)
- Once considered taboo, kids books with political messages are becoming increasingly popular (The Guardian)
- Why are YouTube videos suddenly all an hour long? (WIRED)
- Bad news if you’re sick of remakes: They’re not going anywhere (CNN)
- The Grinch made some box-office green this weekend, pulling in US$66 million domestically (Variety)
- Voice assistants like Alexa and Siri have set a new record for speed of adoption—surpassing even the smartphone (Recode)
- Microsoft scoops up two video games in an effort to create a new popular offering (The Guardian)
- Facebook has quietly launched its TikTok clone Lasso—but can it compete at this point? (The Verge)
- LEGO’s VP of design talks about why you have to be good at keeping secrets to work at the brickmaker (Metro)
- Nintendo Switch moves from gaming device to media player with new YouTube function (Tech Crunch)
- Vine officially has a successor, and it has a very similar name to competitor TikTok’s parentco… (The Verge)
- It was supposed to revolutionize XR headsets, but has Magic Leap fallen off a cliff? (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Lovers of nostalgia, or clinging to the past? Why lots of Brits are still watching black-and-white TV (CNN)
- The company behind the visual effects in the first Star Wars trilogy is opening a TV division (SyFy)
- Tech is always looking for the next big thing—and for some reason, it’s foldable phones? (The Verge)
- Snapchat has one last trick up its sleeve: How the techco is courting the best in AR talent (Digiday)
- As the SVOD space gets more crowded, the goal now is to just stay afloat (The Hollywood Reporter)
- Fox’s earnings get a bump ahead of the Disney merger (The Hollywood Reporter)
- How Netflix courted the industry’s top talent to make its new kids slate possible (Variety)
- What’s old is new again: Amazon is shipping its first-ever holiday toy catalogue to customers this month (CNBC)
- Most parents who let their kids watch YouTube have encountered disturbing videos, says new study (Tube Filter)
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