Microsoft and News Corp in Yahoo Bid Talks 91
KingAlanI writes "The New York Times website is reporting that Microsoft is trying another angle in its bid for Yahoo: joining up with another behemoth, Murdoch's News Corporation.
This is still very much in the preliminary stage, if anything, but an important development to consider. The idea of Yahoo working with fellow Web giant Google, in a plan to counteract Microsoft's takeover plan, is also discussed."
I have a feeling.. (Score:2, Insightful)
As for if this will stand in the EU... that is another question all-together.
Re:I have a feeling.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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$$$$$$$$$$$$
Re:I have a feeling.. (Score:4, Interesting)
well, this will be great for MS if allowed (Score:4, Interesting)
But I am guessing that W would allow it (MS paid a lot of money to his campaign), but EU, China, Russia, and japan will nix it. And yes, those countries do have a say. After all, they can simply shut down all Windows sales, which would push Linux to the forefront. And from their POV, that would mean new business opportunities.
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After all, they can simply shut down all Windows sales, which would push Linux to the forefront. And from their POV, that would mean new business opportunities.
I wonder if they really can? If they have such power why haven't they done it already? Would they only push for Linux if MS was integrating yet another thing to their desktop?
I think the only thing that would happen is MS would have to pay another fine like in US/EU and everything would be business as usual.
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As to pushing Linux
just the facts, man (Score:2)
and your source for this stat is to found where, exactly?
That's the fact. Here's a link. (Score:4, Interesting)
Source: Wikipedia article about Mergers and Acquisitions [wikipedia.org]. Quote: "Historically, mergers have often failed (Straub, 2007) to add significantly to the value of the acquiring firm's shares (King, et al., 2004)."
That idea is well-known, but I was unable to find another link quickly. (It's only a Slashdot comment, not the result of a research project.) For example, the merger of Time-Warner and AOL is the worst business decision of human history, and lowered the value of Time-Warner so much that employees lost much of their invested savings.
The basic point seems valid in this case, also. Microsoft has proven, over many years, that it does not know how to run a search engine. Yahoo has proven, over many years, that...
I'm guessing that Steve Ballmer is doing this because he wants an outlet for his anger. It's difficult to see how owning Yahoo can benefit Microsoft. One possibility is that Microsoft can try to get a partial monopoly over some kinds of internet traffic. Many people with little technical knowledge use whatever Microsoft pushes them towards.
Microsoft is NOT a successful company, in my opinion. If Microsoft didn't have one-time monopolies created during a time when people were ignorant about computers, it would not make much profit.
Also, the failure of Vista may indicate that Microsoft can no longer hire people intelligent enough to write working software.
Mergers are often CEO ego-tripping, or trickery. (Score:2)
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I'm not a business major or anything of the sort, but applying the little I know and some common sense, I think there are many situations where a buyout would be good for both companies.
If history dictated that there is no net benefit, then it just wouldn't happen.
I also think it depends on what the end goal is. Not all buyouts oc
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I'm not a business major or anything of the sort, but applying the little I know and some common sense, I think there are many situations where a buyout would be good for both companies. If history dictated that there is no net benefit, then it just wouldn't happen.
You make a very good point. As I said before, Buyouts tend to do little in terms of Adding value to a company. However, you are correct in your observation that a merger and/or buyout would allow the company to sustain its own livelyhood, for instance. The benefit may simply be observed in the fact that the company continues to exist, though still, without adding more value for its underlying equity.
On the subject of MSFT, take a look at the following link http://www.ifa.com/Library/Support/Data/returnsa [ifa.com]
And Russia, china, and even japan (Score:2)
Brilliant (Score:5, Funny)
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Is this a poison pill strategy? (Score:1)
Re:Is this a poison pill strategy? (Score:4, Insightful)
All in all, the goal seems to be to strengthen Yahoo in order to push up the stock price to avoid a hostile takeover. The poison pill approach is to make the company look so bad that nobody would want to buy it. I don't think that's what Yahoo's trying to do at all.
Re:Is this a poison pill strategy? (Score:4, Informative)
I think it would qualify more as a poison pill strategy if Yahoo! gave up their own ad service completely and signed a binding long-term agreement with Google, the kind that survives mergers and buy-outs.
I would like to congratulate Microsoft (Score:3, Funny)
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Better link (Score:5, Informative)
The wrinkly photo of Murdoch (complete with disembodied hand) is just icing on the cake.
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I tried: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/10/technology/10google.html [nytimes.com], but got redirected to a login page. Perhaps you're a subscriber? or my country isn't allowed to login automatically & yours is?
(which, by the way, is fully owned by the NYT company)
I don't give a crap where the article's from as long as I can read it.
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I tried: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/10/technology/10google.html [nytimes.com] [nytimes.com], but got redirected to a login page. Perhaps you're a subscriber? or my country isn't allowed to login automatically & yours is?
Really? I clicked your link and it led to the article. I'm in the UK, but also at a university. I'll give it a try at home tonight (although I don't think you'll care much for the result).
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Interestingly enough, it works for me at my work too.
Time-Warner Is Also Making A Play (Score:5, Informative)
Don't count out another media player:
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN0929033920080410?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews&rpc=22&sp=true [reuters.com]
Hard to know whether this is going to turn into a bidding war, but no matter what happens, Yahoo's days as an independant 'net player on the big stage are numbered.
MSFT, Hotmail and Yahoo (Score:3)
IMHO, I don't think Microsoft is going to gain anything by taking over Apple, Yahoo OR Google. They have acquired Hotmail earlier, and I personally know many friends switching from Hotmail to something else for pathetic services. I do not have a single contact with Hotmail address today.
MSFT is not known for quality, and, yes, it is loss to the world to have lost a good company to MSFT. But MSFT is not going to gain anything
/troll
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The geek would live a freer, happier, life if he could surrender the delusion that he counts for much in Microsoft's world:
Here are up-to-date numbers for a single country, Turkey:
Turkey has a population of about 75 million.
Of the 300 million MSN users worldwide, 25 million are Turkish.
Turkey ranks third in using MSN Messenger.
Turkey ranks first in t
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Re:MSFT, Hotmail and Yahoo (Score:5, Insightful)
Those statistics being "single country" also makes them less valid on the world scale.
I thought I smelled a fish when your statistics seemed to indicate that 1/3 of all Turks are "MSN users". This also means that if this [wikipedia.org] and this [internetworldstats.com] is correct, there are more MSN users than Internet users in Turkey. So let us just assume that EVERY single Internet user in Turkey is also an MSN user.
Could this possibly be representative for the world?
The answer is pretty obviously "no".
If all your statistics are correct, Turkey accounts for approximately 8.3 % of the MSN users in the world, but less than 1.3% of the worlds internet users (based on 1.32 billion Internet users from here [wikipedia.org]).
Either your numbers are completely wrong, or MSN is over 6 times as popular in Turkey as the average for Internet users. Either way, they are completely useless as proof of total MSN usage in the world.
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Internet users aren't always to be found in the Cafe:
Cenk Serder, was very visible at the recent Mobile World Congress, spending a lot of time talking to the press about his company's approach to a host of services. On instant messaging, he was making the point that in Turkey, where there are millions of W
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If MS could buy them out and squash them it would. That is also true for mos Linux distro's - If MS could buy out Canonical (ubuntu) and others it would - but for now they are just threatening lawsuits...
Out of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire (Score:5, Insightful)
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Why would they want to convince anyone that its not evil? What, and lose any support they might have in corporate America? I don't think so!
Pot, this is Kettle (Score:5, Interesting)
"Microsoft immediately blasted the idea of a search advertising partnership between Yahoo and Google, saying it would be anticompetitive. âoeAny definitive agreement between Yahoo and Google would consolidate over 90 percent of the search advertising market in Googleâ(TM)s hands,â Microsoft said in a statement."
For some reason, this cry for justice rings empty. Does Microsoft honestly think THEY can make such complaints given their own gregarious behavior?
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Yes, it's how psychopaths operate. The reality is that Microsoft can't even service their OS monopoly with a competitive product, watching them try to play in every single market is both amusing and frustrating. But let's not chastise them for it, the arrogance is already undoing them from the inside-out.
Re:Pot, this is Kettle (Score:4, Insightful)
What MS says is logically true, I just don't happen to give a rats ass about them saying it.
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It can be rephrased as a non-ad-hominem:
Microsoft demonstrated several times that US's antitrust measures have no teeth. It's ironic that the one company that's so clearly demonstrated that, now hopes the regulators will change their approach.
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I think it's pretty evident that the above is ad hominem attack trying to dissuade us from the main point that:
Which, while exaggerated, is still a logical argument. The state of the desktop market plays no bearing in the stateme
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I believe the word that you wanted is egregious, but your spell checker changed to gregarious.
Would you by chance, be running Windows with MS's new context checking software?
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Um, "gregarious" [reference.com]? WTF? "Egregious" [reference.com], maybe?
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Stupid spelling checker...
But the question is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Will this actually lure people away from Google? Right now the mentality is quite simply "Google It".
I'm not sure we'll be hearing "Yahoo! It" or "MSN It" any time soon.
It probably doesn't help that Google is the default search in Firefox either.
Re:But the question is... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not sure we'll be hearing "Yahoo! It" or "MSN It" any time soon.
It probably doesn't help that Google is the default search in Firefox either.
You can talk about propaganda and public relations and brainwashing when people say they have warm-fuzzies when thinking about Apple and Google. At the end of the day, though, people have to use their products. You can say it's marketing but a lot of people really, really like Apple and Google products. They can't all be kool-aid drinkers. If Jobs acts like an insufferable twat with the overbearing egotism of someone who thinks he's always right, well damnit, he usually is. We probably wouldn't dislike him as much if he turned out a Vista every once in a while. The Mac Cube was lame but not lame enough.
Brands to Synonyms (Score:2)
Probably not, but they might "'google it' on Yahoo!" much like people happily "hoover [wikipedia.org] with a Dyson [wikipedia.org]".
Could've been funnier (Score:5, Funny)
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Thats a clear message to MSN that they lost the "mindspace" of internet search for consumers, and I'm sure it gets Ballmer's panties in a wad.
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When your carefully nurtured trademark enters popular usage as a generic term for your product or service you are in deep shit.
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As long as its a term for your product or service, you are fine. When it enters popular usage as a generic term for products or services in your market (as happened with Xerox and Kleenex), you're screwed. While Google is often used as a verb for running internet searches, its not really clear to me that its used in a brand-generic sense (as "search on the internet") rather than a b
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"I'm old but hip. I Google the interweb for recipes on Martha's website."
Holy hell Microsoft, back off (Score:2)
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Yahoo doesn't want to be under you, get the hint.
At this point, those at Microsoft do not care what would be preferred by those at Yahoo. The actions by Microsoft have an stench of inevitability.
However, Yahoo may have done an excellent job of driving up the asking price. By denying Microsoft, News Corp. is becoming involved, and supposedly Time Warner, and let's not forget the Google rumours.
Before, Yahoo had one option, an option that Microsoft felt Yahoo would eventually have to agree to. With the possibility of new potential buyers or investors
microsoft smells (Score:2)
Two great evils together at last. (Score:4, Funny)
Hey you've got monopoly in my right right wing politics.
Ah two great evils that taste better together.
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I keep trying to peer into my crystal ball to work out what it would be like to have these three monsters pawing each other while lurching towards my pocket, and it just sounds like a great big clusterfuck of 2nd grade mediocrity, failing to win any of my hard earned cash. This story is salutory in that it has more to do with the way all 3 (I'm including Yahoo!) companies perceive their daily grind, than it has to do with how good product is delivered to the masses,
Microsoft + FOX + Yahoo! = (Score:3, Funny)
Did it just get cold in here? (Score:2, Troll)
Yahoo's Google test means MS was right (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, combining 3 "also rans"doesn't mean we get a winner, just that we'll at least likely have a fight!
Don't Feed the Lawyers (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, google as a monopoly for a few years sounds quite nice. I like monopolies. Aren't monopolies what gave us all that stuff that isn't MS, that has allowed MS
Nonsense (Score:2)
-As a general rule, upwards of 80% of acquisitions fail to bring "synergies" that are referenced as justification for mergers public relations. Most of them are done to eliminate competition and grow a balance sheet to fund the next acquisition.
-The scale and managerial mediocrity of all companies in your post suggest that nothing viable would come out
AOL Bailout (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think that's the exact reasoning for making such a deal. Yahoo would get cash from Time Warner to buy back its stock (thwarting Microsoft), but it would also have to transfer AOL's operations onto its balance sheet, making it a less valuable company.
Time Warner loves this of course, since it's been trying to get the AOL albatross off its neck basically since right after the two companies merged. The 20% stake it'll get in Yahoo-AOL is just a bonus.
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The AOL-Yahoo! merger might give the new company quite a bit of equity, but will the shareholders recognize that? or will they be blinded by the mismanagement?
Interesting argument from MS (Score:3, Funny)
Don't like either (Score:2, Troll)
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Cool!
Where is Haliburton? (Score:2)
Ha-li-bur-ton!
Ha-li-bur-ton!
Ha-li-bur-ton!
Where the Hell is Haliburton? We have Microsoft and Fox News, but without Haliburton the triumvirate of evil is not complete!
Foo (Score:1, Funny)
this just seems like one of those boxes (Score:2)
Hmm.. where have I seen THAT before ? (Score:1)
And competition disappears (Score:1)
First thoughts... (Score:1)