Is Facebook a friend of news companies, or is it a rival? No matter
how much success publishers have piggybacking off its traffic, they
can’t escape the cruel math: The more of their time consumers spend on
Facebook and other social networking hubs, the less they have left
over for news sites. Now The Wall Street Journal has what it thinks is
an answer to this problem. Called WSJ Social, it filters Journal
content through the so-called social graph to yield a news product
that lives entirely within the walls of Facebook. It launches Tuesday. http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovici/2011/09/19/wsj-social-for-a-world-w...
how much success publishers have piggybacking off its traffic, they
can’t escape the cruel math: The more of their time consumers spend on
Facebook and other social networking hubs, the less they have left
over for news sites. Now The Wall Street Journal has what it thinks is
an answer to this problem. Called WSJ Social, it filters Journal
content through the so-called social graph to yield a news product
that lives entirely within the walls of Facebook. It launches Tuesday. http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovici/2011/09/19/wsj-social-for-a-world-w...
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