eBay

The ultra-Canadian goods that people buy and hawk online

We asked eBay to crunch the numbers on some of the ultra-Canadian goods people have bought and sold on the site over the years

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eBay goes offline to lure new customers

Meanwhile, Amazon expands pickup locations

Your very own Tuscan village

Your very own Tuscan village

An entire 800-year-old town is looking for buyers on eBay

Google, Facebook, Amazon and eBay go to Washington

Meet the Internet Association, the big dot-coms’ lobby group

Do you take cellphone?

Do you take cellphone?

PayPal, the online payment-processing system made popular by eBay, its corporate parent, is betting that its future may not be online, but in the real world. PayPal is planning a push into retail stores with a system that would involve swiping cellphones at registers to make payments, rather than using credit or debit cards. The company, which has 95 million users online, estimates expanding into physical stores could double its revenues to $7 billion within two years.

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Searching for fame with your pants on the ground

How American Idol has turned hollow celebrity into a worthwhile achievement

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The true value of the Internet

Up until last September, I only used the Internet for two things

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Biz Fix

In the money: Google’s stock price may not have hit anywhere near the $1,000 a share many analysts were predicting last year. (In fact, it’s been slogging along in the $550 range). But the company is still dreaming up ways to try and boost its online ad revenue. The latest is a deal with Seth MacFarlane, creator of  the television cartoon The Family Guy.  MacFarlane, the New York Times reports, is working on an Internet animation series (called “Seth MacFarlane’s Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy”) that will appear on thousands of web sites using Google’s advertising system, AdSense. The short, two-minute episodes will appear with ads, facilitated by Google, attached to the beginning, or somehow worked into the videos. Google seems intent on setting up its own little online television network, not just selling ads but distributing the content.  “We feel that we have recreated the mass media,” Google tells the Times. Unlikely. But Google, to its credit, continues to defy its critics by luring ad dollars that once would have gone to television over to the Internet.