Archive for the ‘Yahoo’ Category

They ask for dismissal of the new CEO of Yahoo! by a »

They ask for dismissal of the new CEO of Yahoo! by a false resume

A group of Yahoo shareholders today called for dismissal of the new company's CEO, Scott Thompson, after confirmation of falsehoods in his resume that is considered a violation of the ethical code of the Internet giant. In an open letter to Yahoo's board, Daniel Loeb, head of Third Point investment fund that controls 5.8% of the assets of

Microsoft is thinking about Yahoo »

Microsoft is thinking about Yahoo

Microsoft is probably considering a new offer to buy Yahoo. But the price will be much lower than the bid of 2007. What was not then, could be today: Yahoo rejected Microsoft advances and when Steve Ballmer showed up in Sunnyvale with tens of billions of dollars, then called for a flashback to re-evaluate the options available, then they

AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo: the union is strength »

AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo: the union is strength

Microsoft, AOL and Yahoo unite in a consortium with which they will attempt to collect a larger share of the market in advertising display. The union is strength and if there are three the results are even better. AOL, Microsoft and Yahoo have, therefore, to unite in a pole anti-Google to be able to find a way into the world of advertising,

Yahoo, check the hypothesis of the transfer »

Yahoo, check the hypothesis of the transfer

The change of CEO is the only obvious sign of a change far more profound: the departure of Carol Bartz, in short, is not only a simple rotation at the top, but probably the decision to place a much more profound that Yahoo could reject the storm. According to the Wall Street Journal also learned, the group decided to have the Sunnyvale turn

Yahoo bets on IntoNow »

Yahoo bets on IntoNow

With a quick move designed to prevent interference by competing companies, Yahoo has gotten their hands on IntoNow, startup born just three months ago and work in the world of technology related to the distribution of television content on the net for a figure between 20 and 30 million dollars, the Sunnyvale giant can now boast a product of great