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Is FiLife Running On Borrowed Time?

Less than two months after talking up the turnaround at Dow Jones-IAC (NSDQ: IACI) personal finance JV FiLife, paidContent has learned the site’s continued existence is no certainty. It survived the multiple trimmings as Barry Diller cut back on IAC’s portfolio of emerging businesses, but the company is now exploring options that range from leaving it open to a sale or a full shut down. When Ezra Kucharz, president and GM for just over a year, left for CBS (NYSE: CBS) in January, both IAC and DJ credited him publicly with turning around the site and building it to the #4 personal finance site with 4.4 million unique visitors in December. Now both companies are declining comment about the site’s future.

One possibility for IAC could be selling its stake to Dow Jones (NYSE: NWS), which recently bought out SmartMoney partner Hearst. But that’s a well-established brand with an 800,000-circ magazine. Whether DJ would even want to own FiLife outright is unclear—as is whether a deal actually would involve much money. What FiLife does have—more traffic than SmartMoney.com, where personal finance is just one category, and a digital mentality. Is there a way to combine the two?

FiLife has had a bit of a tortured life from its beginning: taking more than a year to move from an idea to a blog, then taking so long to emerge from that status the plans appeared to be dormant. Dave Kansas, brought in from the Wall Street Journal to launch the site, was replaced by online vet Kucharz in late 2008. Adam Wiener, executive editor and VP-content was promoted to GM when Kucharz left, but not given the title of president.

It’s made strides on the editorial side. Just last month FastCompany picked it as the most innovative company in the finance area for using “a Q&A format with a host of social and game-like features to get Americans talking about money. More as warranted—and please feel free to e-mail me if you have details.

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Mar 19, 2010 11:15 PM ET

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Posted In: Features, Exclusive, Media & Publishing, Online News, Companies, IAC, News Corp., Dow Jones

  • To Soren (2)

    I should have said, most BROADBAND ISPs assign a static IPs.

    Dial-up/ADSL users often get a random IP at each dialup occasion.

    And that is logged too, in the form of "User 324943 logged on at XXXX and was assigned IP XXXX".

  • To Soren

    Soren: Bullshit, most ISPs assign a STATIC IP to each customer. You're truly stupid if you choose to be willfully ignorant and put yourself at danger. People with static IP have the same IP all the time so if the ISP gets a request to turn over the person for that IP, they get the right person.

    Likewise, almost all ISPs have logs of who owned each IP at what time. How do I know? I worked at Telia and we had these logs for law enforcement purposes such as child porn cases.

  • Sören Andersson

    This is all newspaper propaganda. IPRED will have no effect since the ISP will not store the information. This way its impossible to know who had a specific IP. This is legal and alot if ISP will do this. Those who chose not to, will lose customers.

  • mk3

    A very positive step. This is only the beginning, however.
    Still stronger measures need to be implemented and enforced, and not only in Sweden, but worldwide.

    The Pirate Bay also needs to be shut down. If the name is not enough of a give-away, the fact that they are using cloaking technologies should also clarify the illegal intent.

Covering the UK’s Digital Media Economy | paidContent:UK Newsletter

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