Steve Case, one of the chief architects of the souring marriage between America Online and Time Warner, is coming under pressure from shareholders to step down. By David Teather.
Notebook: Lastminute.com, the flotation that marked the bursting of the internet bubble in Britain, has always showed a special ability to get its stock market followers to suspend logic.
Peter Wilkinson, the architect of internet service provider Freeserve, has emerged as the chairman and largest investor in a new interactive digital television business. By John Cassy.
AOL Time Warner yesterday warned America Online is continuing to disappoint expectations and would deliver far lower earnings this year than previous forecasts. By David Teather.
AOL Time Warner today warned results at its America Online internet division would fall below expectations as a result of the ongoing advertising slump. By Claire Cozens.
10am: Napster, the revolutionary song sharing network that once boasted more than 80m users, has played its last note and fired its 42 staff after a US court blocked the sale of the company to German media giant Bertelsmann. By Owen Gibson.
10.45am: Bertelsmann is the latest media giant to retreat from the internet as it looks to sell Bol.com and pull the plug on the Napster music service. By Owen Gibson.
AOL Time Warner is close to agreeing a $9bn (£5.9bn) deal that will result in the media group taking full control of Warner Brothers studios and a number of television channels including Sex and the City home HBO. By David Teather and Mark Milner.
8.30am: US record companies have launched a Napster-style legal assault on a firm that allows free downloads of the latest tracks from hit artists such as Christina Aguilera. By Owen Gibson.
The boss of internet travel firm ebookers has admitted he had once held merger talks with Lastminute.com as he signalled that he was ready to return to the acquisition trail. By John Cassy.
Michael Eisner, the embattled chief executive of Walt Disney, is set to strengthen his hand on the business after a potential boardroom shake-up. By David Teather.
BT has gone from being the basket case of the telecoms industry to one of the few former state-owned monopolies showing any growth in a turbulent market. By Richard Wray.