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Highlights on this week’s calendar include monthly gross domestic product, a Bank of Canada deputy governor speech and results from BlackBerry.
There’s more to handing out marketing promotions than meets the eye. Anne Kadet takes to the streets to learn the secrets of a flier distributor.
For 60 years, royals and rock stars have flocked to Jean Pigozzi’s Villa Dorane pool. His new book captures the action.
Jabil Circuit Inc. cuts its guidance for the year and projected downbeat results for the current quarter, warning of weaker demand in its mobility segment.
Prem Watsa, one of Canada’s most prominent investors, sees significant risk that North American and European economies may slip back into recession, as governments run out of ammunition to spur growth.
The Republican National Committee filed two lawsuits seeking access to Hillary Clinton’s records, potentially opening a new chapter in the ongoing legal saga over her decision to use a personal email server while secretary of state.
The chief executive of Micromax Informatics has quit, as India’s second-largest smartphone maker struggles to keep pace in a highly competitive market.
BlackBerry Ltd. may be struggling to regain relevance in the global smartphone market, but its instant messaging is still a hit in Indonesia.
Deals of the Day is your one-stop-shop for the morning’s biggest news from the finance beat, including M&A, IPOs, banks, hedge funds and private equity.
An FBI victory in its battle against Apple may encourage more people to use encryption apps that device makers didn't create and have no particular ability to crack. Here's a case in point. An encrypted messaging app called Telegram has 100 million users and is gaining 350,000 users every day, according to its founder.
BlackBerry said it acquired Encription, a small U.K.-based cyber security consulting business, as the Canadian smartphone maker looks to bolster sales of mobile security offerings.
Top management and policy priorities from task forces in five areas at the CIO Network conference.
Members of The Wall Street Journal’s CIO Network and guests at the 2016 conference.
Good morning. Venture capital investors in India have slowed investments in sudden and abrupt fashion, reflecting the anxiety that has entered global public and private markets. Indian tech startups raised $959 million in the final three months of last year, the WSJ’s Sean McLain reports. That is less than a third of the $3.2 billion they invested in the previous quarter, and roughly half the $1.9 billion invested in the fourth quarter of 2014, according to data firm Traxcn.
BlackBerry Ltd. said it would lay off about 200 employees at its Canadian headquarters in Waterloo, Ontario, and at a satellite office in Sunrise, Fla.
Line Corp. on Wednesday said its users in Indonesia can now hail motorcycle taxis directly from its chat application, underscoring the company's push to grow its user base outside of Japan, where it dominates mobile messaging.
The Australian Open, the first Grand Slam tennis tournament of the year, is known as the Happy Slam because of its many perks. But this year may be the happiest of all: players get unlimited free food.
Forget early adopters. As product cycles get shorter, latecomers to new tech are an increasingly numerous and influential consumer group.
Hillary’s explanations look increasingly contrived as evidence of malfeasance mounts day by day.
More evidence that she mishandled highly classified information.