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In April 2017, a Norfolk, Massachusetts, jury awarded a jewelry store over $34,000 after it determined that its competitor's employee had filed a false negative Yelp review that knowingly caused emotional distress. [144] In December 2019, Yelp won a court case that challenged the company's explanation of how its review recommendation software ...
After the Federal Trade Commission revealed a number of complaints, shareholders are taking Yelp to court, claiming Yelp artificially inflated the price of stock for its executive's benefit. The Class Action lawsuit, [ 15 ] being led by investor Joseph Curry, focuses on Yelp's "first-hand" reviews.
JanSport – Alameda acquired by VF Corporation; Jamba Juice – moved from Emeryville to Frisco, Texas; Knight-Ridder – purchased by The McClatchy Company; Leslie Salt – purchased by Cargill in 1978; Maxtor – Milpitas – acquired by Seagate; McKesson Corporation – moved from San Francisco to Irving, Texas; Mervyn's – Hayward (defunct)
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The East Bay Times is a daily broadsheet newspaper based in Walnut Creek, California, United States, owned by the Bay Area News Group (BANG), a subsidiary of Media News Group, that serves Contra Costa and Alameda counties, in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.
The newspaper was scheduled to close down, with the last issue of the paper published on November 1, 2011, along with a proposal to end publication of The Oakland Tribune, Hayward Daily Review, Fremont Argus and West County Times. On November 2, subscribers were to get copies of the new East Bay Tribune, a localized edition of the Mercury News. [2]
United Engineering Co. (incorporated 10 October 1917, [1] about six months after the sale of the predecessor company United Engineering Works to the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation where it became their Alameda Works), in Alameda, California, was a shipbuilding and repair yard active during World War II.
The Argus was a newspaper in the town of Fremont, California. Floyd L. Sparks was the longtime owner of The Argus, along with the Daily Review and the Tri-Valley Herald. [1] [2] It was last owned by Bay Area News Group-East Bay (BANG-EB), a subsidiary of MediaNews Group, who purchased the papers from Sparks in 1985.