Online Services Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Online Services stocks.

Online Services Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 15 MSFT Tudor Investment's top buys and sells in Q1
May 15 MSFT Xbox Game Pass Reveals Wave 2 Titles: Hellblade 2, Chants Of Sennaar And More
May 15 MSFT Artificial Intelligence Players Must Weigh High Rewards With Immense Risks: Moody's
May 15 MSFT David Tepper's Appaloosa adds Adobe, Boeing, exits GM among Q1 buys, sells
May 15 MSFT Sector Update: Tech Stocks Higher Late Afternoon
May 15 MSFT Bridgewater's top Q1 buys, sells: Amazon, AMD, Medtronic, CME, others
May 15 MSFT Microsoft Imposes New Climate Requirement on Suppliers in Effort to Lower Its Emissions
May 15 MSFT Temenos sets sustainability benchmark for cloud-native core banking with Microsoft
May 15 MSFT Google is reinventing itself for the AI age
May 15 MSFT OpenAI rival Anthropic hires Instagram co-founder as its chief product officer
May 15 MSFT Microsoft’s AI Push Imperils Climate Goal as Carbon Emissions Jump 30%
May 15 MSFT AI-Powered Capex Spike Seen At Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Google, Apple. 'Big Tech Is The New Big Oil.'
May 15 MSFT Economics on Apple AI deal come into question ahead of WWDC: BofA
May 15 MSFT Tanking Profit Overshadowed Alibaba's AI Growth And Reignited Domestic E-Commerce
May 15 MSFT Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Other Tech Stocks React to CPI Report
May 15 MSFT Workers heading back to the office on Mondays, caterer Compass says
May 15 MSFT Better Buy: Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF or Vanguard Growth Index Fund ETF?
May 15 MSFT 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks Microsoft Stock Is Going to $465. Is It a Buy?
May 15 MSFT Google Regains AI Initiative by Playing to Its Strengths
May 15 MSFT Nvidia Recently Bought 5 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks, and 1 Is Absolutely Soaring
Online Services

An online service provider (OSP) can, for example, be an Internet service provider, an email provider, a news provider (press), an entertainment provider (music, movies), a search engine, an e-commerce site, an online banking site, a health site, an official government site, social media, a wiki, or a Usenet newsgroup. In its original more limited definition, it referred only to a commercial computer communication service in which paid members could dial via a computer modem the service's private computer network and access various services and information resources such a bulletin boards, downloadable files and programs, news articles, chat rooms, and electronic mail services. The term "online service" was also used in references to these dial-up services. The traditional dial-up online service differed from the modern Internet service provider in that they provided a large degree of content that was only accessible by those who subscribed to the online service, while ISP mostly serves to provide access to the Internet and generally provides little if any exclusive content of its own. In the U.S., the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act (OCILLA) portion of the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act has expanded the legal definition of online service in two different ways for different portions of the law. It states in section 512(k)(1):

(A) As used in subsection (a), the term "service provider" means an entity offering the transmission, routing, or providing of connections for digital online communications, between or among points specified by a user, of material of the user’s choosing, without modification to the content of the material as sent or received.
(B) As used in this section, other than subsection (a), the term "service provider" means a provider of online services or network access, or the operator of facilities therefore, and includes an entity described in subparagraph (A).
These broad definitions make it possible for numerous web businesses to benefit from the OCILLA.

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