FindLaw | For the Public | For Small Business | For Legal Professionals | Find a Lawyer
   
WAR ON TERROR
IRAQ COVERAGE
Search News
 News Front Page
Business
Civil Rights
Crime
Environment
Immigration
Labor
Personal Injury
Politics
Product Liability
Supreme Court
Tech & IP 
 Commentary
 International
 Entertainment
 Sports
 Book Reviews
 Weather
 News Wires
Andrews Publications
Associated Press
Washington File 
 The Spin Room
 Featured Docs
 Special Coverage
Friday, May 9, 2008 Print This | Email This     

Google execs hope for long-term ad deal with Yahoo

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE AP Business Writer

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) - Google Inc.'s top executives expressed hope Thursday that the Internet search leader will be able to form a potentially lucrative advertising partnership with Yahoo Inc. - a deal that would lower the odds of Microsoft Corp. renewing its attempts to buy Yahoo.

"We have been talking to Yahoo and we are very excited to be working with them," Google co-founder Sergey Brin told reporters before the company's annual shareholders meeting. "We share a lot of values with them."


Neither Brin nor Google Chairman Eric Schmidt would indicate how far along the two sides are in their negotiations after a two-week test was completed last month. During the trial run, Google supplied a small portion of the text-based ads that appeared alongside the search results on Yahoo's Web site.

Because Google's technology proved it could select more profitable ads, the alliance could help Yahoo snap out of a prolonged slump that made it vulnerable to Microsoft's unsolicited buyout bid. Microsoft orally raised the bid to $47.5 billion, or $33 per share, before pulling it off the table last weekend.

Microsoft cited Yahoo's willingness to subordinate its own ad system to Google's as a major reason for dropping its bid.

Google suggested the ad partnership to Yahoo as a weapon to fend off Microsoft.

"We really believe in companies having choices about their destinies," Brin said. "It's not about scuttling (the deal). They were under a hostile attack and we wanted to make sure they had as many options as possible."

Schmidt left little doubt that Google was pleased to spoil the deal, however. He said he wanted to keep Yahoo out of Microsoft's hands largely because he was concerned the world's largest software maker would abuse the added power it would acquire in e-mail and instant messaging to limit consumer choices.

"Obviously, we are happy that is not going to happen," Schmidt said. He described Google's current relationship with Yahoo as "very, very friendly."

If Yahoo were to sign a long-term ad deal with Google, some analysts believe that would repel Microsoft for good. Although Microsoft executives have publicly indicated they are looking for other ways to bolster the software maker's unprofitable Internet operations, some investors still suspect another bid may surface if Yahoo continues to struggle in the months ahead.

The hopes for another bid have helped cushion the blow to Yahoo's stock since Microsoft walked away. Yahoo shares rose 58 cents to finish Thursday at $26.22 - 8.5 percent below their price when Microsoft made its last bid.

A partnership between Google and Yahoo almost certainly would face intense antitrust scrutiny because the two companies together control more than 80 percent of the U.S. market for online search advertising. The U.S. Justice Department has already made inquiries about the two-week test they conducted.

"If there were a deal (with Yahoo), we would anticipate structuring the deal to address the antitrust concerns that have been widely discussed," Schmidt said.

Although Schmidt wouldn't specify how Google might address the antitrust issues, analysts have speculated that it could be done by running the partnership as an auction-style system that would allow other rivals, including Microsoft, to show ads on Yahoo.

Depending on the breadth of the partnership, Google's ad system could nearly double 2009 profit, UBS analyst Benjamin Schachter estimated in a research report released Thursday.

Google shareholders attending Thursday's meeting didn't seem to care about the implications of a potential Yahoo partnership. One shareholder, though, did ask Brin and fellow Google founder Larry Page about their recent marriages. Brin deflected the question, saying they preferred to confine the discussion to business.

In an unusual move, Brin abstained on two shareholder proposals that the company's board opposed.

One proposal sought to create a special committee on human rights to review the ramifications of the company's policies. The other asked for Google to stiffen its opposition to the demands of governments in China, Burma, North Korea, Iran and other countries that seek to censor search results and other Web content.

Although he said he didn't fully support the proposals, Brin said he empathized with the issues they addressed. He holds a special class of Google stock that gives him 28.5 percent voting power over shareholder issues.

Both shareholder proposals were defeated, according to Google, but a breakdown of the vote won't be disclosed until later this year.

2008-05-09     06:48:49 GMT

Copyright 2008
The Associated Press All Rights Reserved
The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authorityof The Associated Press.
  FindLaw's Writ
Is Lethal Injection Cruel?
A Perspective on the Comparison Between Animal Euthanasia and Lethal Injection.
By Sherry Colb

Coming Thursday:
Columnist Marci Hamilton

   Legal Technology
Corporate America And Uncle Sam Need To Wake Up To E-Discovery and E-FOIA Obligations, Part Two
by Eric Sinrod

Metadata: Ethical Obligations of the Witting and Unwitting Recipient
by David Hricik & Chase Edward Scott

  Featured Documents

Spitzer Call Girl Files $10M Suit Against 'Girls Gone Wild'
[HTML File]

Hells Angels Founder Sues HBO
[HTML File]

Judge Awards >$1M in Legal Fees to One Congressman in Suit Against Another [PDF File]

N.Y. Gov., Ex-AG Eliot Spitzer Embroiled in Prostitution Scandal
[PDF File]

Va. Supreme Court Uphold’s Felony Spam Conviction
[PDF File]

Mitchell Report on Doping, Drugs in Baseball
[PDF File]

Michael Vick’s Plea Agreement, Statement of Facts, Indictment
[HTML Files]

Federal Indictment of Barry Bonds in Investigation of Athletes and Drugs
[HTML File]

Former High-Level Democratic Fundraiser Norman Hsu Indicted
[HTML File]

Topic Index

Submit Your Docs...

FREE Breaking Docs Newsletter

FindLaw Poll
Will Uma Thurman's Accused Stalker Be Found Guilty
Yes
No
Maybe
Ask The Jurors
[See Results...]


  FindLaw.com LEGAL NEWS:  Top Headlines · Supreme Court · Commentary · Crime · Cyberspace · International
US FEDERAL LAW:  Constitution · Codes · Supreme Court Opinions · Circuit Opinions
US STATE LAW:  State Constitutions · State Codes · Case Law
RESEARCH:  Dictionary · Forms · LawCrawler · Library · Summaries of Law
LEGAL SUBJECTS:  Constitutional · Intellectual Property · Criminal · Labor · more...
GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:  US Federal · US State · Directories · more...
INTERNATIONAL RESOURCES:  Country Guides · Trade · World Constitutions · more...
COMMUNITY:   Newsletters · Message Boards · Greedy Associates Boards
TOOLS:  Email · West WorkSpace · FirmSites
Advertising Info · Help · Comments Jobs@FindLaw · Site Map
Company | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer Copyright © 1994-2008 FindLaw