Owen Thomas | |
---|---|
Born | March 30, 1972 |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Blogger, journalist, entrepreneur |
Owen Thomas (born March 30, 1972) is an American blogger, journalist, and entrepreneur who serves as managing editor of the San Francisco Business Times . [1]
He was the founding executive editor of The Daily Dot [2] and former executive editor of VentureBeat. [3] He was the managing editor of Valleywag, a Gawker Media gossip and news blog about Silicon Valley personalities that billed itself as a "tech gossip rag". [4]
Thomas graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology. [5] He is a 1994 graduate of the University of Chicago. [6] He first worked at Suck.com, and later at the former technology magazine Business 2.0 . [7]
He was managing editor of the Silicon Valley gossip website Valleywag, before leaving to run NBC's local site for the San Francisco Bay Area. [8]
Thomas does some on-screen commentary in the film Revenge of the Electric Car . [9]
In 2013, Thomas was named editor-in-chief of ReadWrite. [10] He joined the San Francisco Chronicle as business editor in 2016, [11] leaving in 2021 to become a senior editor at the tech news site Protocol. [1]
Thomas replaced Nick Denton as the managing editor of Valleywag on July 6, 2007. [7] Valleywag, a two-man operation, was written mostly by Thomas, with help from its former editor, Nick Douglas. [12]
In 2007, Thomas outed Peter Thiel as gay while Thiel was in Saudi Arabia on business in Valleywag. In response, Thiel covertly funded lawsuits by third parties against Gawker Media, Valleywag's parent. Thiel's role came to light in the aftermath of the Bollea v. Gawker verdict, which awarded Bollea, known professionally as Hulk Hogan, $140 million after Gawker published a sex tape of him. Thomas contends that Thiel's sexuality was already "known to a wide circle", so his coverage did not constitute an outing. [13]
Upside was a San Francisco-based business and technology magazine for venture capitalists. It was published from 1989 to 2002. It had a circulation above 300,000.
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Gawker Media LLC was an American internet media company and blog network. It was founded by Nick Denton in October 2003 as Blogwire, and was based in New York City. Incorporated in the Cayman Islands, as of 2012, Gawker Media was the parent company for seven different weblogs and many subsites under them: Gawker.com, Deadspin, Lifehacker, Gizmodo, Kotaku, Jalopnik, and Jezebel. All Gawker articles are licensed on a Creative Commons attribution-noncommercial license. In 2004, the company renamed from Blogwire, Inc. to Gawker Media, Inc., and to Gawker Media LLC shortly after.
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Valleywag was a Gawker Media blog with gossip and news about Silicon Valley personalities. It was initially launched under the direction of editor Nick Douglas in February 2006. After Douglas was fired, the blog was taken over by Owen Thomas. Thomas left in May 2009, and was replaced by Ryan Tate.
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Powerset was an American company based in San Francisco, California, that, in 2006, was developing a natural language search engine for the Internet. On July 1, 2008, Powerset was acquired by Microsoft for an estimated $100 million.
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Bollea v. Gawker was a lawsuit filed in 2013 in the Circuit Court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in Pinellas County, Florida, delivering a verdict on March 18, 2016. In the suit, Terry Gene Bollea, known professionally as Hulk Hogan, sued Gawker Media, publisher of the Gawker website, and several Gawker employees and Gawker-affiliated entities for posting portions of a sex tape of Bollea with Heather Clem, at that time the wife of radio personality Bubba the Love Sponge. Bollea's claims included invasion of privacy, infringement of personality rights, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Prior to trial, Bollea's lawyers said the privacy of many Americans was at stake while Gawker's lawyers said that the case could hurt freedom of the press in the United States.
Sam Faulkner Biddle is an American technology journalist. He is a reporter for The Intercept, and was formerly a senior writer at Gawker, the editor of the news website Valleywag, and a reporter at Gizmodo.
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