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On The Eve Of War, The United States Stands Alone
International Polling Shows Publics of Traditional U.S. Allies Oppose U.S.-British-Led Military Action to Remove Saddam Hussein
U.S. Citizens Stand Alone in Favor of Military Action in Choice Posed in Polls in Canada, France, U.K. and the U.S.
In Survey of Nine Countries, Majorities in Most Want to Distance Themselves from U.S. Policies in General -- France, Japan, Spain, Canada and U.K. More So -- While Three-in-Four Americans Want Other Countries to Draw Closer to U.S. Policies -
Ipsos Becomes The World's Second Largest Survey-Based Research Specialist
2002 Revenues Up 12.1% at 538.5 million euros
Organic Growth: 8.0% -
Beyond Surfing: E-commerce And Banking Surge
Consumers Embrace Downloading Digital Music And Pictures, Too, Ipsos Study
Shows -
Lonely America: Little Global Support for U.S. Government Policies
Few citizens want leaders to further back
American positions, Ipsos survey shows -
On the 10th Anniversary of NAFTA . . .
More Americans (48%) Believe They're NAFTA Winners, Compared to Canadians (38%), Mexicans (30%)
However, Canadians (44%) Most Likely To Want Closer Trade and Economic Ties with NAFTA Partners, While Americans (39%) Most Likely to Want Status Quo . . .
And Mexicans (33%) Most Likely to Want Less Trade, Economic Ties -
Americans Continue To Embrace Potential Of Digital Music
Ipsos-Reid's Quarterly Digital Music Study, TEMPO: Keeping Pace With Online Music Distribution, Finds Americans' Digital Music Appetite Remains Strong Throughout 2002
Over 100 Million Americans Have Listened To A Pre-recorded CD's On Their Computer, And Roughly 60 million Have Downloaded -
Continuing Growth
Revenues in the First Nine Months of 2002 up 12.2%
Organic Growth in the First Nine Months of 2002 : 7.8% -
Ipsos Reports Consolidated Results For 1st Half Of 2002
Strong Growth In Revenues: +13%
Net Income Up 29%
Improved Operating Profitability -
U.S. Music Downloaders Prefer A Pay-Per-Download Transaction Over Current Subscription-Based Offerings
Ipsos-Reid's Quarterly Digital Music Study, TEMPO: Keeping Pace with Online Music Distribution, Reveals Fee-based Services Could Flourish Upon Elimination of Peer-to-Peer Networks