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Google’s translation center: Language lessons for the Googlebot?
Autor admin | 05.08.2008 | Category Google, Internet News

Google looks set to launch a beta test of a document translation service, a new move in the company’s efforts to break down language barriers.
Facebook to help some programmers, punish others
Autor admin | 24.07.2008 | Category COMPANIES, Internet News

SAN FRANCISCO - Facebook Inc. is introducing more tools to help the software applications fueling the online hangout’s popularity and is promising to intensify its efforts to weed out programs that violate its rules for protecting users’ privacy.
Yahoo spurns Microsoft again as bad blood boils
Autor admin | 13.07.2008 | Category COMPANIES, Internet News, Microsoft, Yahoo

SAN FRANCISCO - Yahoo Inc. has rejected Microsoft’s latest attempt to buy its online search operations in a “take or leave it” proposal that Yahoo said would have dismantled its Internet franchise.
Microsoft backs Icahn’s bid to oust Yahoo board
Autor admin | 08.07.2008 | Category COMPANIES, Internet News, Microsoft, Yahoo

SAN FRANCISCO - Microsoft Corp. threw its weight behind investor Carl Icahn’s effort to dump Yahoo Inc.’s board, saying Monday that a successful shareholder rebellion would encourage the software maker to renew its bid to buy Yahoo’s Internet search engine or possibly the entire company.
Court orders YouTube to give Viacom video logs
Autor admin | 05.07.2008 | Category Internet News, YouTube

NEW YORK - Dismissing privacy concerns, a federal judge overseeing a $1 billion copyright-infringement lawsuit against YouTube has ordered the popular online video-sharing service to disclose who watches which video clips and when.
Yahoo and Microsoft making the rounds with old lovers?
Autor admin | 03.07.2008 | Category Internet News, Microsoft, Yahoo
A bit of deja vu is creeping into recent media reports of Microsoft whispering into the right ear of News Corp. and Time Warner’s AOL about potential partnerships, while Yahoo is whispering in their left.
Yahoo says mobile search service reaches 600 mln
Autor admin | 17.06.2008 | Category Mobile & Wireless, Yahoo

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Internet media firm Yahoo Inc said on Tuesday that its mobile search service will be offered by six more telecom companies in Asia.
It now has 60 such partnerships worldwide, including with Mahanagar Telephon Nigam (MTNL) in India, Hong CSL Limited, Smart Communications and Digital Mobile Phlis (Sun Cellular) in the Philippines and Vibo Telecom in Taiwan. “We are now able to reach 600 million subscribers,” David Ko, Asia managing director and vice president of Yahoo’s mobile division, told reporters at a media briefing.
“This creates the scale to make mobile advertising attractive.”
He said the mobile advertising market is expected to rise to $16.2 billion in 2011 up from $1.5 billion in 2006 and that Yahoo “would obviously love to take a large chunk of that pie.”
The Yahoo + Google - Microsoft spin room
Autor admin | 15.06.2008 | Category COMPANIES, Google, Internet News, Microsoft, Yahoo

With the Microsoft/Yahoo/Google triangle taking a new shape as Microsoft exited and Yahoo and Google connected, the analysts covering tech industry sports are weighing in with their opinions.
Some Wall Street analysts believe Microsoft will take another run at Yahoo if the company can’t get back on track or Carl Icahn wins his proxy fight to control the Yahoo board. That may be wishful thinking. Kara Swisher reports that Microsoft is done with its courtship of Yahoo and nothing will bring them back to the negotiating table.
Mike Arrington of TechCrunch called the Yahoo-Google deal a massive destruction of shareholder value, employee morale, and the Interent balance of power:
Yahoo’s hatred of Microsoft runs so deep that they were actually, in the end, willing to destroy the future of their company just to keep it independent for a short while longer. They’ve ignored the wishes of their shareholders, employees and many now former key employees in killing that deal. And apart from Google, CEO Jerry Yang, President Sue Decker and possibly Tim O’Reilly, I don’t believe there is anyone in the world that is happy with what has happened.
In a further lambasting post, Arrington called Yahoo desperate and possibly neurotic:
Quite simply, it looks to me like Yahoo is effectively paying Google off to step in and (1) keep Jerry Yang, Sue Decker and the current board of directors in power, and (2) avoid a desperation deal with Microsoft for as long as possible, or longer. It’s not even clear to me that Google wants this deal, based on the terms. It almost looks like they’re just doing Yahoo a favor, and trying to keep them out of Microsoft’s hands.
At the other end of the spectrum, venture capitalist Fred Wilson thinks that Yahoo did the right thing by choosing Google over Microsoft as a partner.
Yahoo! finally woke up and did what they should have done years ago, cede search monetization to Google who simply does it better and will always do this era of search better than anyone else.
Now Yahoo! will do what it needs to do. Clean house, get lean, get out of businesses it shouldn’t be in. Focus on what it’s good at. And start making money and growing again.
They may need new leadership to do that. But selling this asset to Microsoft just because they had the wrong leadership and probably still have the wrong leadership is a mistake.
From my reading of the events over the last five months, Yang regrets that Microsoft walked away from the acquisition talks. “We all felt and understood a combination done right has a tremendous amount of power and leverage,” Yang said during an interview with Walt Mossberg at the D6 conference.
As a founder, Yang preferred that Yahoo stay independent and that he have the chance to turn the company around as CEO. Microsoft historically was not the kind of partner that Yang considered for a marriage. And his board of directors, led by non-executive Chairman Roy Bostock, seemed to go along with that line of thought.
But the entire affair turned out to be mostly about the money, as Decker admitted. “We never got through the price door,” she stated during the same D6 interview. Yahoo’s board believed that the company was worth more than $35 per share based on future promise, and Microsoft wasn’t on the same page. In effect, Microsoft called Yahoo’s bluff.
It also wasn’t helpful that Yahoo was negotiating the search deal with Google at the same time Microsoft was pursuing its hostile bid. After months of rejection, Microsoft basically became less enchanted with the potential marriage, and despite the pummeling from the shareholders, Carl Icahn’s camp, and the press, Yang and his advisors held out for more money.
Unable to come to terms with Microsoft on a generous deal just for the search business, Yahoo took the less complicated, non-exclusive Google deal that allowed the company to remain in the search game.
As I wrote in my post “The battle for Yahoo’s soul,” Jerry Yang and Sue Decker have a short runway–about six months–to prove that they can “redefine” the essence of Yahoo in a way that yields more revenue, profit, and positive buzz. With the continuing board room distractions, employee defections, and morale issues that go along with being under siege by various parties, the duo have their work cut out for them.
Google grows stronger in Microsoft-Yahoo fallout
Autor admin | 14.06.2008 | Category Google, Internet News, Microsoft, Yahoo

SAN FRANCISCO - Microsoft Corp.’s abandoned takeover bid for Yahoo Inc. appears to have culminated with a disheartening thud for those two companies but amounted to yet another coup for online search leader Google Inc.
What began in January as Microsoft’s most audacious attack yet on Google instead paved the way for the Internet’s most powerful company to gain even more clout through a deal that gives Google access to a large chunk of Yahoo’s advertising space.
By submitting to a partnership that endorses Google’s search advertising technology as a better choice than its own, Yahoo is giving online marketers even more incentive to spend most of their money with its biggest rival, according to industry analysts.
It looks like such a sweet deal for Google that the U.S. Justice Department and lawmakers are expected to take a hard look at the arrangement to make sure it doesn’t give Google too much control over the Internet’s search advertising market.
Google currently has about 75 percent of the U.S. search advertising market followed by Yahoo at 9 percent, according to the research firm eMarketer Inc.
Although they contend their alliance won’t lessen competition, Google and Yahoo have agreed to wait until late September to begin working together so the U.S. government has more time to assess the potential impact.
Even more importantly to Google, the Yahoo partnership keeps a potentially valuable weapon out of Microsoft’s control.
Without Yahoo’s renowned franchise, Microsoft once again is scrambling to find a way to fix its unprofitable online operations and narrow Google’s commanding lead in the Internet’s rapidly growing ad market.
Google shares gained $18.56 to close Friday at $571.51 while Microsoft shares added 83 cents to close at $29.07 — an indication that some investors were relieved the world’s largest software maker concluded it would be too expensive and troublesome to buy Yahoo.
On the other side of the fence, Yahoo shareholders had been clinging to the possibility that Microsoft would revive its last offer of $47.5 billion, or $33 per share, to buy the Internet pioneer. But those hopes evaporated late Thursday after Yahoo disclosed Microsoft had “unequivocally” rebuffed an attempt to renew the negotiations.
In a sign of investors’ frustration, Yahoo shares dropped as much as $1.77, or 7.5 percent, Friday before rallying late in the session to finish at $23.47, down five cents. The downturn marked Yahoo’s lowest stock price since it closed at $19.18 at the end of January, just before Microsoft launched its takeover attempt.
That leaves Yahoo’s market value 29 percent below Microsoft’s last offer, which was withdrawn May 3 after Yahoo asked for $37 per share. Yahoo’s stock hasn’t reached that price since January 2006.
At least Microsoft still has a strong, highly profitable backbone — a suite of software products that run most computers around the world.
Yahoo, though, may have made a Faustian bargain by hiring Google to show ad links next to a significant portion of the ad links appearing alongside search results on its Web site in the United States and Canada. The Sunnyvale-based company also will pluck Google ads to show on other Web sites in its marketing network.
Yahoo expects its annual revenue to get an $800 million lift from the arrangement with Google while still showing show the majority of its own ads alongside its own search results. But most analysts viewed it as an act of desperation, asserting it’s only a matter of time before advertisers shift all their business to Google because they know their messages will show up on Yahoo either way.
Deutsche Bank analyst Jeetil Patel described Yahoo’s decision to farm out advertising to Google as “one of the worst strategic maneuvers seen in the Internet industry.”
Google will get such great access to Yahoo’s highly trafficked Web site that it should be able to gather more insights about the correlation between search requests and advertising, ThinkPanmure analyst William Morrison wrote in a Friday research note titled “Giving Away The Store (To Google).”
And that additional data could help Google further improve its advertising formula to become an even more compelling marketing magnet.
The partnership also cast doubt on a turnaround plan Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang began drawing up year ago after he replaced Terry Semel as the Sunnyvale-based company’s chief executive.
A big part of that strategy hinged on Yahoo becoming a “must-buy” for advertisers — a strategy that the Google deal appears to contradict.
“This raises very important questions about the long-term vision for (Yahoo) and its place in the industry,” said Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Derek Brown.
Yahoo shareholders will get a chance to vent their frustration at the company’s annual meeting Aug. 1 when activist investor Carl Icahn will seek to replace the board with nine alternate candidates.
Icahn was primarily interested in selling Yahoo to Microsoft, so his campaign to replace the board may be hurt if he can’t persuade shareholders he has other viable ideas on how to boost Yahoo’s stock price. He didn’t return a call seeking comment Friday.
Yang and his top lieutenant, Susan Decker, defended the Google deal as a profitable move that will better position the company to capitalize on the Internet advertising market’s growth from roughly $40 billion worldwide this year to a projected $75 billion to $80 billion market in 2011.
Microsoft contends it offered Yahoo a better alternative even after losing interest in buying the entire company.
When the latest talks broke off June 8, Microsoft was prepared to buy Yahoo’s search operations for $1 billion and pay $35 per share to accumulate $8 billion worth of Yahoo’s stock, according to an internal note sent Friday by Kevin Johnson, who oversees Microsoft’s online operations.
Microsoft also would have offered guarantees that could have boosted Yahoo’s operating cash flow by an estimated $1 billion annually, Johnson wrote.
Yahoo estimates the Google partnership will increase its operating cash flow by $250 million to $450 million annually.
“Regardless of Yahoo’s decision, we will continue to move forward on our strategy in online services and advertising,” Johnson assured Microsoft employees.
Microsoft left the door open to renewing talks about buying Yahoo’s search operations. Yahoo also gave itself some wiggle room by including a clause in the Google partnership that would end the alliance for a termination fee of up to $250 million.
Some analysts and investors still think Microsoft eventually might try to buy Yahoo in its entirety, although at a price well below $47.5 billion.
“Yahoo seems to have backed itself into a corner pretty effectively here so it would appear Microsoft has a lot of leverage,” said Dan Davidowitz, a portfolio manager for Polen Capital Management, which owns about 750,000 shares of Microsoft and 37,000 shares of Google.
Davidowitz said he isn’t interested in owning Yahoo’s stock.
Google lets users measure the power of words
Autor admin | 11.06.2008 | Category Google, Internet News

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Number-crunchers can rejoice as Google Inc offers deeper access to the underlying figures for users’ Web searches, giving some insight into trends based on the relative popularity of various words.
The Internet search leader is expanding its existing Google Trends service to allow users to see underlying numerical data on the popularity of any particular search in Google’s vast database of search terms, relative to others.
Google Trends was begun two years ago as an entertaining but limited way to indicate what the world is thinking about over time, at least in terms of Web searches.
Now Google is giving users the ability to search across terms in its database, instantly chart how they compare to other search terms, then export the underlying numerical data into a common spreadsheet format to compare with other data.
Google Trends (http://trends.google.com/) lets users compare demand for various search terms and see how popularity differs across geographic regions, cities or languages.
A year ago, the company introduced Hot Trends, which gave users insight into fast-rising Web search trends with data refreshed several times daily. The tool’s power only grows as people conduct more and more of their everyday activities online, with Web search often their primary starting point.
The data in Google Trends stretches back to 2004. While the service is based on the many billions of individual searches performed each year, Google Trends only reveals data on the aggregate numbers of searches, not the searches themselves.
National differences in the endless human search for sex or love can vary widely, according to a Google Trends chart. http://tinyurl.com/5jt5ce/
Google Trends users can also chart the explosion of interest in the term “backdating” since 2006, reflecting the scandal over how hundreds of companies backdated options for executives. http://tinyurl.com/5l8osu/
Searches for the word “Microsoft” had a more than two-to-one-lead in searches over “Apple” three years ago, but Apple had virtually closed the gap by the end of 2007.
Then news reports of its takeover bid for Yahoo appears to have stoked a recovery in Microsoft this year. Searches for Microsoft have outnumbered those for Apple by about 7 to 5 in recent weeks, according to Google Trends data.
Users must be registered and signed into a Google account to use the service. One can then see the evolution of new terms or concepts through Google searches, including the rise of “Google Trends” itself. http://tinyurl.com/6zd6pg/.
(Editing by Braden Reddall)
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