Thomson-Reuters Corporation
Summary
Thomson Reuters is an information company created by the Thomson Corporation's purchase of Reuters on 17 April 2008. Thomson Reuters shares are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: TRI) and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: TRI). Thomson Reuters is headquartered in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, USA. The Woodbridge Company, a holding company for the Thomson family of Canada, owns 53% of the group, which operates in 100 countries, and has over 55,000 employees.The Company was founded by Roy Thomson in 1934 in Ontario as the publisher of The Timmins Daily Press. In 1953 Thomson acquired the Scotsman newspaper and moved to Scotland the following year.
Thomson-Reuters Corporation Twitter Mentions
Latest Thomson-Reuters Corporation News RSS Feed
-
The Weather Company Assembles Ad Tech's Miami Heat
There’s a storm coming. Data is shifting the tides of digital advertising, buoying giants like Google, Facebook, Amazon, Twitter. . . . and The Weather Company?.
-
Thomson Reuters suspends employee accused of aiding hackers
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Thomson Reuters Corp suspended with pay a deputy social media editor for Reuters. com who has been indicted for aiding members of the Anonymous hacking collective, a company spokesman said on Friday.
-
Matthew Keys says he’s ‘fine,’ plans ‘business as usual’
Reuters | Los Angeles Times Reuters Deputy Social Media Editor Matthew Keys took to Twitter Thursday night, hours after he was indicted for allegedly helping hackers deface Tribune Co. websites.
-
Top jobs of the week in digital media
Over here at paidContent, we’re gearing up for SXSW, which kicks off later this week. If you’ll be in Austin, Texas, and you’re involved in the book and digital reading startup space, be sure to ping our writer Laura Hazard Owen. In the meantime, check out our latest batch of job listings from around the country:.
-
UK universities slide down greasy pole of perception
Fewer British universities have this year made it into the world's top 100 colleges, as ranked by reputation. The University of Leeds has dropped out, but Cambridge remains in third place, and Oxford has climbed from sixth to fourth.
-
Salesforce's $835 million quarterly revenue tops forecasts
(Reuters) - Salesforce. com Inc on Thursday reported better-than-expected quarterly sales of $835 million, backed by strong sales of its cloud-based services.
-
Andrew Norfolk of the Times wins Paul Foot award
Yorkshire Post's Rob Waugh and Daily Mail's Stephen Wright also win prizes at event celebrating investigative journalism.
-
Paul Foot award names shortlist of eight campaigns by journalists | Media Monkey
Eight campaigns are on the shortlist for the Paul Foot award, set up by Private Eye and the Guardian in Foot's memory: Tom Bergin, Thomson Reuters (for reporting on tax avoidance by Starbucks); Jonathan Calvert, Heidi Blake, Sunday Times (ex-generals lobbying for MoD contracts); Ted Jeory, Trial by Jeory blog (politics in one London borough); Alexi Mostrous, Fay Schlesinger, the Times (tax avoidance schemes); Claire Newell, Graeme Paton, Holly Watt and Robert Winnett, Daily Telegraph (exam boards); Andrew Norfolk, the Times (sexual exploitation of teenage girls); Rob Waugh, Yorkshire Post (scandals involving local police and Acpo); and Stephen Wright, Daily Mail (15 years' coverage of the Stephen Lawrence case).
-
OpenTable's quarterly results beat estimates
(Reuters) - U. S. online restaurant reservation service provider OpenTable Inc reported quarterly results that beat analysts' estimates, helped by an increase in the number of seated diners.
-
Shutterfly beats estimates, driven by holiday season
(Reuters) - Online photo-sharing service provider Shutterfly Inc's results beat analysts' estimates in the traditionally strong fourth quarter on higher demand during the holiday season, particularly in its enterprise unit.

TheMediaBriefing Social