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Microsoft We Might Buy Yahoo If Shareholders Fire Board: related news
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The pressure for Yahoo to knuckle under and do a deal with Microsoft just keeps rising. This morning, Microsoft said in a statement that it’s willing to return to the table for a new deal—either for Yahoo’s search operations or even for the whole company—if a new board proposed by activist financier Carl Icahn is elected at Yahoo’s Aug. 1 annual meeting.
in Top Tech
via Business Week @ 14:56 7th Jul
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The pressure for Yahoo to knuckle under and do a deal with Microsoft just keeps rising. This morning, Microsoft said in a statement that it’s willing to return to the table for a new deal—either for Yahoo’s search operations or even for the whole company—if a new board proposed by activist financier Carl Icahn is elected at Yahoo’s Aug. 1 annual meeting.
in Top Tech
via Business Week @ 14:50 7th Jul
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Last night Yahoo rejected another offer for its search business from Microsoft and investor Carl Icahn. The proposal also included conditions that would have required the replacement of Yahoo's top management and board of directors. This is not the first time Icahn has pushed for such a measure. Quoting: "Yahoo said in rejecting the offer it told Microsoft it was willing to sell the entire company for at least $33 a share and its board believed such a deal could be negotiated and executed before its annual shareholders meeting on August 1. Yahoo said it also informed the software giant it remained willing to negotiate an 'improved search only transaction.' Microsoft, however, rejected both offers, Yahoo stated."
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 8:16 14th Jul
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TEL AVIV (MarketWatch) -- Yahoo Inc. said late on Saturday that it rejected a restructuring proposal from Microsoft Corp. and the investor Carl Icahn, and the Sunnyvale, Calif., Internet-services giant called on Microsoft to bid for the whole company. Yahoo said the Microsoft-Icahn plan, which it said would turn Yahoo's search business over to the Redmond, Wash., software giant and the rest over to the New York investor, was presented as a take-it-or-leave it proposition. "This odd and opportunistic alliance of Microsoft and Carl Icahn has anything but the interests of Yahoo's stockholders in mind," Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock said in a statement. Yahoo said that while it rejected the restructuring, it offered two alternatives: "It repeated its offer to sell the entire company to Microsoft for at least" $33 a share, and it "offered to nego
in Search Engines
via MarketWatch @ 7:21 13th Jul
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Microsoft said in a statement that a buyout of Yahoo would depend on whether billionaire financier Carl Icahn succeeds in ousting the Yahoo board and Yang.
in Search Engines
via Xinhua News Agency @ 20:13 7th Jul
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The pressure for Yahoo to knuckle under and do a deal with Microsoft just keeps rising. This morning, Microsoft said in a statement that it’s willing to return to the table for a new deal—either for Yahoo’s search operations or even for the whole company—if a new board proposed by activist financier Carl Icahn is elected at Yahoo’s Aug. 1 annual meeting.
in Top Tech
via Business Week @ 14:56 7th Jul
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Back in February, we pointed out that Google was playing with fire in suggesting that a Microsoft-Yahoo merger would violate antitrust laws. It seemed fairly obvious that those statements would come back to haunt Google -- a company many others have been accusing of antitrust violations. And, indeed, even with Microsoft still trying to buy Yahoo, Microsoft is now making nearly identical antitrust claims against Google concerning its ad deal with Yahoo. It's all legal posturing, of course, in an attempt to get the government to annoy a competitor. As Declan McCullagh points out at the link above, if either company really believes that the other was violating antitrust laws, it's perfectly free to file a private antitrust lawsuit. But, instead, both companies are playing a game in trying to get the government to be a pest for the other -- a
in Search Engines
via Techdirt @ 21:34 15th Jul
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A proposed online search advertising deal between Yahoo and Google came under fire at a US senate hearing as Microsoft claimed that Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang had himself admitted that the agreement would hurt competition. Speaking before the senate's judiciary committee, Microsoft's general counsel Brad Smith recounted a June 8 meeting at the San Jose airport involving Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer, Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and other company executives during which Yang allegedly said a Google-Yahoo deal would be anti-competitive.
in Search Engines
via Financial Express @ 5:43 17th Jul
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LOS ANGELES, July 7 (Xinhua) -- Microsoft said on Monday that it might renew talks to buy Yahoo's search technology or the entire company only after the Yahoo board and its Chief Executive Jerry Yang were ousted.
in Search Engines
via Xinhua News Agency @ 3:37 8th Jul
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Yahoo late Saturday revealed that it has rejected a purportedly aggressive joint bid proposed by Microsoft and investor Carl Icahn. The deal would have seen both the Windows developer and Icahn buy Yahoo's search business and significantly restructure Yahoo to potentially improve its remaining businesses, including the replacement of the board of directors with Icahn's own slate and remove the "top management team" at the company, which most observers believe would include Yahoo chief Jerry Yang as well as others known to have opposed any of Microsoft's earlier offers for takeovers and partial buyouts.
in Search Engines
via MacNN @ 7:25 13th Jul
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Privacy advocates say Yahoo's Fire Eagle gives outside developers access to information. If users opt out of Fire Eagle, previously collected information can be kept by the developers. Yahoo says developers must disclose to users how they will use the location data, and Yahoo has the ability to shut down applications misusing the service.
in Data Privacy
via Data Storage Today @ 4:50 17th Aug
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Privacy advocates say Yahoo's Fire Eagle gives outside developers access to information. If users opt out of Fire Eagle, previously collected information can be kept by the developers. Yahoo says developers must disclose to users how they will use the location data, and Yahoo has the ability to shut down applications misusing the service.
in Data Privacy
via Mobile Tech Today @ 9:25 15th Aug
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A week ago, we discussed Microsoft's contribution to the Apache Foundation. Now, Bruce Perens has written an analysis "exploring the new relationship of Microsoft and the Apache project, how it works as an anti-Linux move on Microsoft's part, and what some of the Open Sourcers are going to do about having Microsoft as a rather untrustworthy partner." In particular, he notes: "...Microsoft can still influence how things go from here on. If they have to live with open source, the Apache project is Microsoft's preferred direction. Apache doesn't use the dreaded GPL and its enforced sharing of source-code. Instead, the Apache license is practically a no-strings gift, with a weak provision against patent lawsuits as its most relevant term. Microsoft can take Apache software and embrace and enhance, providing their own versions of the project's
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 23:59 1st Aug
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I am totally with you Jeda of Melbourne... To think that we human on Earth are the only one in this universe is a total arrogance that is beyond comprehension. We, along with all things exists are made out of the same particles that made up the rest of the Universe. Instead of welcoming the findings and entertaining the possibilities, the ruling governments allow fear to set in and squashed all evidence. We need to change it to the perspective of love... not fear. Perhaps and just perhaps that if we collectively realized that we do indeed share the airspace with other civilizations it might give us a better incentive to unite as one to move our consciousness to a new height. And we might start to treat our own kind a little bit more humanely without the differentiations of country, race and religion.
in Space Science
via Herald Sun @ 2:22 24th Jul
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The ladies and (especially) gentlemen of Microsoft, Yahoo! and Google trooped into the US Congress to inform US politicians about how good and how bad and how anti-competitive the Yahoo!-Google advert deal is; Yahoo! got things off with a joke by their lawyer Michael Callahan that was pretty funny but disrespectful: ''With all due respect to Google, we have every expectation of fighting them and winning;'' Brad Smith, Microsoft solicitor, explained to the congresspeople that if search is the key to the Internet, as ''many'' believe, then ''this deal will put Google in a position to own that gateway and the information that flows through it''; so it's probably fair to say that when Microsoft takes over Yahoo!, this deal will follow the dodo and other extinct species.
in Blog Watch
via Bangkok Post @ 21:23 29th Jul
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Yahoo has rejected yet another bid to buy its search operations, this time a combined, take-it-or-leave-it offer from Microsoft and activist investor Carl Icahn. The embattled Internet pioneer said the new bid contained no guarantees that it would be superior to the Google search ad deal signed in early June. And Yahoo repeated its willingness to sell the whole company to Microsoft for the software giant’s last offer of $33 a share, which Microsoft withdrew two months ago and said it doesn’t plan to revisit. (Full text of Yahoo’s statement after the jump.)
in Search Engines
via Business Week @ 19:23 13th Jul
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While the Microsoft bid to buy Yahoo is long gone, its results seem to be lingering, as both Microsoft and Yahoo have lost search market share to Google since the failed merger was announced nearly 6 months ago. The Hitwise numbers--showing Google with 70.7% market share--just underscore how far both Microsoft and Yahoo (nevermind Cuil) need to go in order to break into Google's search lead. That 70.7% number could be a turning point.
in Search Engines
via NetworkWorld @ 9:52 13th Aug
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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.
in Search Engines
via MSNBC @ 5:20 13th Jul
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The proposed that Microsoft was on Friday to buy the business search Yahoo was the brainchild of head of the board of Yahoo, Roy Bostock, and Yahoo has publicly? Submitted wrong? the discussion surrounding the proposal, Microsoft said on Monday.
in Search Engines
via Daily Gadget @ 21:16 19th Aug
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In a new letter to shareholders on Monday, the activist investor once again dangled the prospects of Microsoft returning to the negotiating table for at least a piece of Yahoo. After admitting before that Steve Ballmer didn’t even take his phone calls, Mr. Icahn now writes that he has had several conversations with the Microsoft chief executive and key lieutenants, some lasting “as long as an hour.”
in Top Internet
via New York Times @ 18:09 7th Jul
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MINNEAPOLIS, BUSINESS WIRE -- Best Buy (NYSE:BBY), the nation's leading consumer electronics retailer, today announced that it will begin rolling out twelve Best Buy Express(TM) automated kiosks in major airports across the U.S. as part of a pilot program. Best Buy Express kiosks will offer a variety of products and accessories at familiar store prices that will appeal to business and leisure travelers alike. Best Buy has teamed with third party ZoomSystems to launch the test.
in Gadgets
via Consumer Electronics Net @ 12:45 11th Aug
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Microsoft confirms that if Yahoo's board is replaced, it would be interested in resuming talks to buy its search business or the entire company
in Top Internet
via InfoWorld @ 18:09 7th Jul
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Microsoft confirms that if Yahoo's board is replaced, it would be interested in resuming talks to buy its search business or the entire company
in Top Internet
via InfoWorld @ 9:27 8th Jul
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When it comes to the iPhone, large entertainment companies are sitting on the sidelines. NBC Universal (NYSE: GE) can’t justify investing in one platform, but instead is putting equal time and investment across the board at this point, Salil Dalvi, NBCU’s GM of wireless, told mocoNews. Heâs not yet convinced thereâs a huge advantage of building on-device applications for the iPhone’s updated operating system. âWe didnât feel that we had to be there on day one ⦠One of the real surprises from my perspective is it just really changes how we approach the market,â Dalvi said. âWeâre taking a look at it. We havenât ruled it in or ruled it out at this point ⦠Do we get 80 percent of what the benefit is just by offering a highly-optimized experience on a web site?â For games, thereâ
in Handhelds
via MocoNews.net @ 19:56 19th Jul
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