Slideshows on a parallel site—which Forbes shut down Tuesday—were loaded with ads and promoted through clickbait-style paid links. Forbes for years ran an alternate version of its website ...
The secondary site was shut down on Tuesday after The Journal started asking questions about it, the report said. A Forbes spokesperson in a statement called the story “deeply misleading” and ...
The alternate site, which Forbes shut down Tuesday following inquiries from The Wall Street Journal, featured stories from Forbes.com that were stretched into formats that can fit many more ads ...
The secondary site was shut down on Tuesday after WSJ started asking questions about it, the report said. A Forbes spokesperson in a statement called the story “deeply misleading” and said it ...
“The alternate site, which Forbes shut down Tuesday following inquiries from The Wall Street Journal, featured stories from Forbes.com that were stretched into formats that can fit many more ads…One ...
Forbes shuttered the site entirely on Tuesday following inquiries from The Wall Street Journal. The site, which Adalytics reports has been serving ads since at least May of 2017, repurposed Forbes ...
Forbes spokesperson said the now-shuttered site represented "only about 1% of Forbes' overall user base." Forbes has been ...
Forbes for years ran an alternate version of its website where it packed ads that were intended to run on Forbes.com, another ...
Forbes has been under scrutiny for operating a made-for-advertising (MFA) website, which was recently shut down following inquiries. This MFA site, distinct from Forbes.com, featured reformatted ...
The developer of the popular Windows app Notepad++ has warned users not to be fooled by a copycat site that is ranking highly on Google. Notepad++ is a text and code editor that’s been available ...
Ad quality firm Adalytics has released a report accusing Forbes of misleading advertisers into believing that they were buying premium ad space on Forbes.com when they were actually buying space ...
That fascination turned into a personal project called The National Pastime, a site that won Holtz a $500 savings bond from AT&T’s Pages service in 1999. A year later, he launched Baseball ...