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Instead of tech companies gathering data and being the gatekeeper, Web 3.0 will return some power back to the users. Disney is setting itself up to be a dominant player in the new age of the internet.
Alas, Disney's Go.com is about to enter the second chapter of its tale, albeit one that was not in the original script. Unable or unwilling to compete against Web portals like Yahoo and Lycos ...
About 100 webcomics featuring characters from Disney, Marvel, Star Wars and 20th Century Studios will be available in Webtoon ...
Disney used the Go.com portal as a central location with links to its myriad Web sites — Disney.com, the sports site ESPN.com, ABC.com and a number of other corporate and entertainment-related ...
The Disney Channel has greenlit "Jump" (working title), a two-hour movie musical about teenagers who compete as double-dutch dancer-athletes. "Jump" stars Corbin Bleu of "High School Musical" as ...
The Walt Disney Co. is launching a new Web site aimed at moms who are increasingly turning to the Internet for answers to everything from problems with teething babies to financing college.
Disney folding Web back into TV Following a trend among its media industry peers, Walt Disney plans to fold the online operations of its TV properties back in-house.
Disney’s current Web revenue of more than $500 million comes in roughly equal parts from product sales, advertising and subscriptions to such premium services as the multiplayer children’s ...
Disney California Adventure will sell web shooters and repulsor cannons that will unlock superhero powers on the Web Slingers: A Spider-Man Adventure.
Disney's recent job post signals that the company is preparing for Web 3.0. This year's Accelerator Program inductees are chock-full of Web 3.0 companies. Disney might be down, but it isn't going ...
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