Daniel Roth

Brooklyn, New York, United States Contact Info
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I’m the editor of LinkedIn, overseeing a team focused on building the voice of the…

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  • LinkedIn

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Publications

  • Demand Media and the Fast, Disposable, and Profitable as Hell Media Model

    Wired

    The process is automatic, random, and endless, a Stirling engine fueled by the world’s unceasing desire to know how to grow avocado trees from pits or how to throw an Atlanta Braves-themed birthday party. It is a database of human needs, and if you haven’t stumbled on a Demand video or article yet, you soon will.

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  • Netflix Everywhere: Sorry Cable, You're History

    Wired

    Netflix has taken the boldest step yet toward a world in which consumers, not programmers, determine not only what they watch but when, where, and how. The dream of routing around cable companies just may be in sight.

    You'll never hear Hastings point that out, however. Unlike many in the tech world, he's a quiet disrupter, sabotaging business models silently and irretrievably.

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  • How to Reform Education: Think Geek

    Wired

    "The best schools," Grodd told me later, "are able to make learning cool, so the cool kids are the ones who get As. That's an art."

    It's an art that has, for the most part, been lost on educators. The notion itself seems incredibly daunting—until you look at one maligned subculture in which the smartest members are also the most popular: the geeks. If you want to reform schools, you've got to make them geekier.

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  • Road Map for Financial Recovery: Radical Transparency Now!

    Wired

    But the volume of data obscures more than it reveals; financial reporting has become so transparent as to be invisible. Answering what should be simple questions—how secure is my cash account? How much of my bank's capital is tied up in risky debt obligations?—often seems to require a legal degree, as well as countless hours to dig through thousands of pages of documents. Undoubtedly, the warning signs of our current crisis—and the next one!—lie somewhere in all those filings, but good luck…

    But the volume of data obscures more than it reveals; financial reporting has become so transparent as to be invisible. Answering what should be simple questions—how secure is my cash account? How much of my bank's capital is tied up in risky debt obligations?—often seems to require a legal degree, as well as countless hours to dig through thousands of pages of documents. Undoubtedly, the warning signs of our current crisis—and the next one!—lie somewhere in all those filings, but good luck finding them.

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  • Brian Roberts: The Dark Lord of Broadband Tries to Fix Comcast's Image

    Wired

    It was as if, in the middle of a phone call to a friend, Comcast got on the line and in the caller's own voice told the friend he was hanging up, while the caller simultaneously heard the same message in the friend's voice.

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  • Back to the Garage: How Economic Turmoil Breeds Innovation

    Wired

    In July 1993, Tom Siebel launched Siebel Systems, which made software for managing corporate sales staffs. The US economy was faltering, and the market for his product was new and untested. In other words, the timing couldn't have been better.

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  • The Rebirth of Henry Blodget

    Wired

    Henry Blodget has never gotten used to the chorus of hate that follows his every move. He's merely learned to live with it.

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  • Driven: Shai Agassi's Audacious Plan to Put Electric Cars on the Road

    Wired

    Now it's Agassi's turn. He starts off uncharacteristically nervous, stammering a bit. He's got something different, he says. A new approach. He believes it just might be possible to get the entire world off oil. For good. Point by point, gaining speed as he goes, he shares for the first time in public the ideas that will change his future—and possibly the world's.

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  • The Birth of Android: Inside Google's Plan to Free The Wireless Web

    Wired

    An article looking at why Google is building Android — mostly out of fear of Microsoft! — and how Andy Rubin is pulling it off.

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  • Barry Sternlicht: Revenge of the Hotel King

    Portfolio

    Barry Sternlicht, the founder of Starwood Hotels, is getting back into the hotel business. Why? To right past wrongs.

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  • Why Cerberus' Chrysler Purchase Is the Most Dangerous Deal in America

    Portfolio

    The Cerberus CEO told the small crowd his mantra: Reveal as little as necessary; be anonymous; be invisible. “We try to hide religiously,” he says. “If anyone at Cerberus has his picture in the paper and a picture of his apartment, we will do more than fire that person. We will kill him. The jail sentence will be worth it.” But then he bought Chrysler right when the world turned and everyone started paying attention.

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  • Bram Cohen’s BitTorrent software made it a cinch to pirate films on the Internet. So why is Hollywood on his side?

    Fortune

    “I didn’t have any clear plans when I first started,” Bram Cohen says. “I wasn’t worried, partially because what I was doing was really cool, and partially because I’m broken and can’t feel anxiety.

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  • Buffett and Gates: The $91 Billion Conversation

    Fortune

    I talk with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett about their close relationship, their plans for poker that night, and Wall Street's willingness to lead investors down the wrong path.

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  • Trump!

    Fortune

    You think Donald Trump's hit reality show is a circus? Spend a few weeks watching him work.

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  • Skype: Catch Us If You Can

    Fortune

    The folks who brought you Kazaa are creating a new company called Skype—and a plan to set phone calls free. If the telcos want to fight back, they'll have to find them first.

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Projects

  • Executive co-sponsor, Women@ LinkedIn

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    Helping LinkedIn’s largest ERG support women in our global offices through messaging, ideas, collaboration, and anywhere else I can lend a hand.

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