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  • Yet another digital dating model is on the horizon — one where user profiles are built completely from images. And it's not the kind of photos you might think.
  • The value of the euro fell by more than 1 percent, after the European Central Bank began its bond buying program.
  • Parents should be paying very close attention to the digital media their children are using, says child advocate James Steyer. "Young people in particular often self-reveal before they self-reflect," he says. "There is no eraser button today for youthful indiscretion."
  • Video conferencing became essential for some working from home during the pandemic. An NPR business correspondent explains what a Zoombomb is and advises listeners on telework safety.
  • "Dolly hopes this series of stories will provide comfort and reassurance to coping kids and families during the shelter-in-place mandates," the Imagination Library said.
  • The "Jena Six" are still in the national spotlight, but it took several months for the racially charged story to get picked up by the mainstream media. The story simmered on blogs and social networking sites for months, gradually building an online life of its own.
  • News you can use: how to buy clothes that last. As a companion to our episode on the clothing waste crisis, "Pants on Fire," Sam Evans-Brown gets a few…
  • Pinterest will launch an in-app "buy" button, and Instagram will soon target ads using demographic data from Facebook.
  • The studio announced it would continue the Star Wars movie franchise with a seventh film due to be released in 2015, and others to follow. Disney also owns Marvel, which it bought for $4 billion in 2009.
  • Comcast, the Philadelphia based cable giant, announced a major deal late Tuesday afternoon. It will buy the 49 percent stake of NBCUniversal that it did not already own for $16.7 billion. General Electric is the seller and will also be selling some prized real estate as part of the deal.
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