Avengers and Archie fans, take note; Scribd just added comics to its e-book subscription service. For $9 per month, you get unlimited access to a catalog of 10,000 comics, ranging from classic issues ...
Avid audiobook nerds tired of dealing with Audible’s nonsense or long library queues now have a new way to get a steady stream of the good stuff. Scribd just announced it will be reinstating an ...
Scribd is apparently moving up in the world. Not only does the service want to be your one-stop shop for ebooks, but apparently it now also wants to be the go-to for magazine subscriptions. Beginning ...
Reading subscription site Scribd announced today that more than 1 million people have signed up for the service, allowing them to access its vast content library of books, audiobooks, magazines, ...
Sarah Mitroff has worn many hats at CNET, including Senior Mobile Editor and Managing Editor of Health and Wellness. Currently, she is a freelance editor. Throughout her career, she's written about ...
Scribd has raised $58 million in new funding led by growth firm Spectrum Equity. The company first launched as a document-sharing service in 2007 before creating an e-book subscription in 2013. It now ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Two years after shifting away from its unlimited subscription model in favor of monthly credits, Scribd has ...
The “YouTube for documents” releases an analytics tool that gives insight on people’s reading patterns. Thanks to Scribd, you’re about to find out what happens. If a writer knew which parts of her ...
Why own a few pieces of media when you can rent access to everything? That pitch defines Netflix, which evolved from an all-you-can-watch DVD service into the kingpin of streaming video. Music ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about the future of books and the business of storytelling. Scribd was first founded as a document-hosting site in 2007 ...
Spotify did it for music. Netflix did it for movies. And now, Trip Adler and Scribd are doing it for books. The 29-year-old entrepreneur and his six-year-old San Francisco startup just unveiled an ...
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