There is no pinned content in this Editor's Picks module.
Click here to learn more about content pinning.
Press CEO Tom Curley has gone on the offensive against Meltwater, a digital news-clipping service that he claims is ripping off copyrighted AP material and reselling it without paying a licensing fee. “Meltwater News is a parasitic distribution service...
The suit alleges that Meltwater News has been pilfering current and past material from the AP and other news providers. "Meltwater News is a parasitic distribution service that competes directly with traditional news sources without paying license fees...
The Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley is interviewed in his office at company headquarters, in New York, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012. After nearly nine years of leading the world's largest news organization as it confronted upheaval in the media... View Photo »
Everyone at the Associated Press takes his or her responsibilities of a free and fair press with utmost seriousness
Associated Press is suing — a media intelligence software service — claiming that Meltwater has repeatedly infringed on the company’s copyrighted material, and often copies AP stories word for word. Tom Curley, the President and CEO of the AP, had some...
"Meltwater News is a parasitic distribution service that competes directly with traditional news sources without paying license fees to cover the costs of creating those stories," Tom Curley, AP `s president and CEO, said in a statement. "It has a...
Wolff: Sell the Sun, Mr Murdoch. P26 Leader: Journalism we need - and don't need. P28 MediaGuardian: Don't ignore the power of Twitter to scoop - but it's not a full news rival. P30 MediaGuardian: Is Channel 4 dressing up some bad news? P30 MediaMoney's...
Associated Press President Tom Curley, second right, and Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho, second left, walk outside KCNA office buildings in Pyongyang, North Korea, Monday Jan. 16, 2012. The AP opened its newest bureau in North Korea,... View Photo »
The world knows very little about the DPRK, and this gives us a unique opportunity to bring the world news that it doesn't now have
Times have changed. "I would say until about 11 September 2001 it was three hours," says Curley, outgoing president and chief executive of the Associated Press. "Now it's 30 minutes. You might say if you are a certain age – with Twitter and Facebook...
Green (Kingston) 10-5; Mohamed Shidid (Washingtonville) d. Paul Gomez (Monticello) 11-6. 138: Shane Connolly (Warwick) pin Frankie Hernandez (Minisink Valley) 3:42; Tyler Owen (Wallkill) d. Corey Cummings (Valley Central) 9-5; Luke Evans (Monticello) pin...
There are no results for this module. Edit this module to change the search term used to query Wikipedia
Associated Press President Tom Curley, left, and Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho hold an Associated Press Pyongyang sign before hanging it on the door of the new AP bureau, situated inside the headquarters of the state-run KCNA in Pyongyang, North Korea, Monday Jan....
View Photo »Associated Press President Tom Curley, right, and Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho make a toast inside the new AP bureau in Pyongyang, North Korea, Monday Jan. 16, 2012. The AP opened its newest bureau in North Korea, inside the headquarters of the state-run KCNA,...
View Photo »Associated Press President Tom Curley, left, and Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho hang the Associated Press Pyongyang sign on the door to open a new AP bureau in Pyongyang, North Korea on Monday Jan. 16, 2012. The AP opened its newest bureau in North Korea, making it...
View Photo »Associated Press President Tom Curley, right, shakes hands with Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho after signing an agreement to open a new AP office in Pyongyang, North Korea on Monday Jan. 16, 2012. The AP opened its newest bureau in North Korea, making it the first...
View Photo »In this photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo by the Korea News Service, Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley, right, speaks to the media upon arrival in Pyongyang, North Korea, Saturday, Jan. 14, 2012.
View Photo »In this photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo by the Korea News Service, Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley, center, poses with Executive Editor and Senior Vice President Kathleen Carroll, second from right, Senior Managing Editor/International...
View Photo »The Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley is interviewed in his office at company headquarters, in New York, Friday, Jan. 20, 2012. After nearly nine years of leading the world's largest news organization as it confronted upheaval in the media landscape, Curley said he plans to...
View Photo »Associated Press President and Chief Executive Tom Curley, right, speaks during a press conference at the Japan National Press Club (JNPC) in Tokyo Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011. Curley said the agency has signed an exclusive deal to provide high definition news video from North Korea to...
View Photo »AP President and CEO Tom Curley speaks during a panel discussion on "The Future of News" during the opening session of the annual APME meeting in Denver on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011.
View Photo »AP President and CEO Tom Curley, center, talks with Dean Singleton, left, AP Board Chairman and Chairman and CEO of Media News Group prior to a panel discussion on "The Future of News" during the opening session of the annual APME meeting in Denver on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. Kate...
View Photo »AP President and CEO Tom Curley, right, talks with Kate Marymont, Vice President/News with Gannett Co. prior to a panel discussion on "The Future of News" during the opening session of the annual APME meeting in Denver on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011.
View Photo »Tom Curley, president and chief executive officer of the Associated Press, left, and Emilio Morenatti, AP staff photographer, chat as they pose for a photograph in front of some of Morenatti's images on display at the United Nations Monday Aug. 22, 2011 during the opening of an...
View Photo »Tom Curley, president and chief executive officer of the Associated Press, left, and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon shake hands Monday Aug. 22, 2011 at the United Nations during the opening of an exhibition of winning images from the first international press photography...
View Photo »Tom Curley, president and CEO of The Associated Press, speaks during a luncheon for the Maryland - Delaware - D.C. Press Association Friday, April 22, 2011 in Linthicum, Md.
View Photo »Tom Curley, center, president and CEO of The Associated Press, speaks to John Pain, left, chief of The Associated Press Mid-Atlantic bureau, and Dennis Forney, right, president of The Maryland - Delaware - District of Columbia Press Association, before an association luncheon, Friday, April...
View Photo »Tom Curley, left, president and CEO of The Associated Press, speaks during a luncheon for the Maryland - Delaware - Distric of Columbia Press Association as the organization's president, Dennis Forney, right, listens Friday, April 22, 2011 in Linthicum, Md.
View Photo »Associated Press President and Chief Executive Tom Curley speaks during a press conference at the Japan National Press Club in Tokyo Thursday, Sept. 29, 2011. Curley said the agency has signed an exclusive deal to provide high definition news video from North Korea to broadcasters...
View Photo »Associated Press CEO Tom Curley, right, introduces David Westin, center, the former president of ABC News, as president and CEO of the News Licensing Group, and Sri Kasi, the former general counsel and vice president of AP, as executive vice president and COO of the NLG Thursday, April...
View Photo »Democratic People's Republic of Korea's Kim Pyong Ho, President of Korean Central News Agency, right, shakes hands with Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley Tuesday, June 28, 2011 in New York. The Associated Press and the North Korean state news agency signed a series of...
View Photo »Associated Press Gramling Award winners surround AP Board Chairman Dean Singleton, seated foreground, during the Gramling Awards dinner at New York headquarters, Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011. Standing, from left are: Dave Minthorn, Stylebook team, Achievement Award; Tom Verdin, Achievement...
View Photo »In this May 11, 2011 photo, Associated Press President Tom Curley listens as Wall Street commentator and author Jim Grant speaks during an interview at AP headquarters in New York.
View Photo »David Westin, left, the former president of ABC News, is introduced as President and CEO of the News Licensing Group by Associated Press CEO Tom Curley Thursday, April 14, 2011 in New York. The AP, a not-for-profit news cooperative, has said that the top priority for the News Licensing...
View Photo »APME President Hollis Towns, right, executive editor of the Asbury Park Press welcomes attendees to the opening session of the 2011 APME annual meeting in Denver on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011. Dean Singleton, left, AP Board Chairman and Chairman and CEO of Media News, Kate Marymont,...
View Photo »Associated Press President Tom Curley, left, and Korean Central News Agency President Kim Pyong Ho hold an Associated Press Pyongyang sign before hanging it on the door of the new AP bureau, situated inside the headquarters of the state-run KCNA in Pyongyang, North Korea, Monday Jan....
View Photo »Everyone at the Associated Press takes his or her responsibilities of a free and fair press with utmost seriousness
The world knows very little about the DPRK, and this gives us a unique opportunity to bring the world news that it doesn't now have
Beyond this door lies a path to vastly larger understanding and cultural enrichment for millions around the world
