In a post on The New Yorker’s website, Ken writes about the resignation of Rebekah Brooks, the News Corp. executive responsible for overseeing at least one newspaper involved in hacking.
Read MoreAuletta, who is joined on the New Yorker podcast by John Cassidy and Lauren Collins, calls the News Corp. pone-hacking developments a threat to the Murdoch family’s “whole notion of political invincibility.”
Read MoreDid Rupert Murdoch know his London newspaper hacked into the voicemail of private phone lines—not only those of the royal family, but of a thirteen-year-old murder victim, and possibly relatives of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan—and paid police to unearth information?
Read MoreIn a post on The New Yorker’s website, Ken writes about AOL’s purchase of the Huffington Post
Read MoreIn a post on The New Yorker’s website, Ken writes about the resignation of Eric Schmidt from Google. Was the C.E.O. pushed or did he jump?
Read MoreAt the 2010 New Yorker Festival, Ken Auletta speaks to a rapt crowd about Google, characterizing it as much more than a simple search engine.
Read MoreKen gave the 2010 Commencement Address at the Nightingale-Bamford School in Manhattan. Here are his remarks to the new high school graduates.
Read MoreMarketWatch's Jon Friedman sits down with The New Yorker's Ken Auletta to discuss the changing media landscape and Google's influence over the old media industries.
Read MoreThe Newhouse School hosted a conversation between Ken Auletta, Lorne Michaels, and Seth Meyers.
Read MoreA sampling of the recent glowing reviews of Ken’s new book, “Googled: The End of the World as We Know It .”
Read MoreKen spoke with Charlie about Google, Microsoft, Twitter, and the future of media.
Read MoreThe New York Times asked two observers of Google to discuss its effect on the Internet and new and old media — Ken, author of “Googled: The End of the World as We Know It,” and Fred Wilson, a venture capitalist at Union Square Ventures and an early-stage investor in many Web companies, including Twitter.
Read MoreMarketWatch's Jon Friedman celebrates Ken's new Google book and muses on what subject the media writer should tackle next.
Read MoreKen spoke with Charlie Rose about his book, "Googled: The End of the World as We Know It," and about how Google has transformed the way we work, live, communicate, and access information.
Read MoreThis week on C-SPAN’s Q&A, Ken talks about his newest book, "Googled: The End of the World as We Know It." It tells the story of the company's founders and the many other people involved in the company's success.
Read MoreIn his new book, Auletta tracks the development of Google from a search engine to the provider of all things Internet. Auletta tells Terry Gross that although the company trumpets free access to information, it is notoriously tight-lipped when it comes to its own formula for success.
Read MoreIn 1985, Ken Auletta wrote a financial classic, Greed and Glory on Wall Street. Now, William Cohan has written another, House of Cards. In a freewheeling discussion on the economic crisis, for the Daily Beast, the authors pin blame, reveal lessons and pull back the curtains on some of Wall Street's most important characters.
Read MoreKen Auletta interviewed news broadcast legends Barbara Walters and Steve Kroft at a breakfast sponsored by the Newhouse School and The New Yorker.
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