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Google And Microsoft Cross Swords Over Yahoo!

Posted by Zonk on Monday February 04, @08:09AM
from the just-a-tiny-bit-biased dept.
watzinaneihm writes "In a blog post Google has called Yahoo/Microsoft merger bad for the future of the internet. It is worried about the number of email and IM accounts this merged entity would control. Microsoft has countered with the argument that Google is actually the big bully in this instance, with most of the search market already tied up. The New York Times, in the meantime, has accused Google of a Microsoft fixation."

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  • Microsoft fixation? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Loibisch (964797) on Monday February 04, @08:12AM (#22289794)

    The New York Times, in the meantime, has accused Google of a Microsoft fixation.
    It's more like Ballmer has a Google fixation. Microsoft really can't stand being second to anybody in any field...
    • Re:Microsoft fixation? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by techpawn (969834) on Monday February 04, @08:17AM (#22289814) Journal
      Not really sure it would be a fixation, maybe a kind of envy complex... When you see something and wonder why you don't have it too you develop a complex of envy to obtain it in one way or another... Right Sigmund?
      • Re:Microsoft fixation? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by dhavleak (912889) on Monday February 04, @09:59AM (#22290924)
        Microsoft has a google fixation? Or envy complex??

        MS woke up late to the internet. Once they woke up, their attempts at gaining a foothold were more or less unsuccessful. The offer on Yahoo is just them realizing that their web strategy needs a course correction pronto. They've built a good search engine (live.com) and ad-platform, but they can't monetize it right now because nobody goes there. Acquiring Yahoo is one of they ways to solve that problem. Yahoo has other assets that will tie in well with a software+services strategy.

        It's really that simple. MS realizes that its business model is under threat, and it's making adjustments before the pain is felt rather than after. No fixation, no envy -- just business as usual.
        • Dead souls (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Serious Callers Only (1022605) on Monday February 04, @01:00PM (#22294064)
          MS woke up late to the internet. Once they woke up, their attempts at gaining a foothold were more or less unsuccessful.

          Indeed. However this move is possibly their most bone-headed reaction yet. I have no doubt it's straight from the brain of Steve I'm going to fucking kill Google [smh.com.au] Ballmer. Acquiring Yahoo is another attempt to tame the internet and tie it to Windows services, and it will fail as dismally as the last few attempts, because the internet (and Yahoo) is the antithesis of Microsoft.

          Users on the web don't like being 'monetized' unless there's something in it for them, and they'll resist attempts by MS to change that balance of power. Those attempts by MS to exploit users are inevitable because it's just not in Ballmer's (or Microsoft's) DNA to let users get something for nothing.

          For Microsoft as a company, swallowing Yahoo whole is going to create many more problems than it solves. It will drive the good engineers to Google (very few of Yahoo's people could thrive under the entirely different MS culture), it'll give Microsoft lots of new properties which directly compete with their own offerings, it'll make all the MS Live employees very nervous and trigger more internal turf wars, and finally, it will land MS with servicing lots of disgruntled users on services like Flickr who will desert in droves at the first attempt to corral them into an MS only internet (as MS is prone to do - see ActiveX, IE, Silverlight, etc). Their business model (lock in the users and milk them for profits) isn't under threat, it's past its sell by date; you can't continually abuse your users forever and expect them never to walk away, particularly not if you're trying to operate as a web services company, and I have my doubts that Ballmer et al will ever learn this lesson. They've done too well in the past by applying it to abandon it now.

          Still, if you don't work at Yahoo, and you're not keen on Microsoft dominating yet another market, this foolish move is heartening news. Google must be celebrating the beginning of the end of the dark ages of the internet. This will tie up MS for years.
    • Re:Microsoft fixation? (Score:5, Funny)

      by somersault (912633) on Monday February 04, @08:19AM (#22289832) Homepage Journal
      Maybe they just have nice people at Google who have noticed that Microsoft is ruining the world of computing and that we could do with competition and/or replacement in several areas.
        • Re:Microsoft fixation? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Stormwatch (703920) <rodrigogirao@hotma i l .com> on Monday February 04, @08:38AM (#22289964) Homepage

          The day they're buying Ubuntu (and make a *nix based system part of their supported portfolio) would be the day that marks their end.
          They had one before. Ever heard of Xenix?
            • Re:Microsoft fixation? (Score:5, Informative)

              by morgan_greywolf (835522) on Monday February 04, @09:43AM (#22290628) Homepage Journal

              . However this was a long time ago and they did not really have the market dominance they have today.
              You kids! Haven't you ever heard of MS-DOS [wikipedia.org]? MS-DOS was the dominant operating system for PCs in the 1980s. Contrary to popular belief among people who are either too young to remember or were too computer illiterate in the 1980s to remember, Microsoft did not build its monopoly on Windows. The Microsoft juggernaut built its multi-billion dollar empire not on Windows, but on MS-DOS. Now you kids get off my lawn!
  • Competition (Score:5, Insightful)

    by caution live frogs (1196367) on Monday February 04, @08:18AM (#22289830)
    I love how Microsoft's take on the merger is that it will create more competition. Why is it that any time a big company swallows a smaller one, we're told that having fewer players in the field will increase competition? Do people actually buy that line of bull? Someone get these guys a dictionary.
    • Re:Competition (Score:4, Insightful)

      by h4rm0ny (722443) <h4rm0ny@nospAm.tarddell.net> on Monday February 04, @08:30AM (#22289922) Journal

      In this instance, it may not be accurate to say that a big company is swallowing a smaller one. In this case, it might be more accurate to say they are rescuing it. Obviously Yahoo wasn't going to vanish, but in terms of search engine usage, it's nowhere close to Google. This might boost that area and introduce a real rival to Google. In which case it really will increase competition.
      • Re:Competition (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gEvil (beta) (945888) on Monday February 04, @09:00AM (#22290108)
        Obviously Yahoo wasn't going to vanish, but in terms of search engine usage, it's nowhere close to Google.

        Right, which is why a long time ago Yahoo began to diversify their offerings. They're not #1 in any field, but they are reasonably strong players in a dozen or so other fields.
      • Re:Competition (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Monx (742514) <.MonxSlash. .at. ... ssibilities.com.> on Monday February 04, @08:48AM (#22290018) Journal
        Most fields do not wind up dominated by a monopoly. Who has a monopoly in the tire industry? What about the stapler market? Nobody holds a monopoly in screen-ruler software.

        Being foremost in your field does not make you a monopoly.

        Both Ubuntu and Apple have real competitors. In order to be a monopoly you have to have no competitors of note. There's also nothing illegal about being a monopoly.

        In order to be an illegal monopoly, you have to use your lack of competition in to prevent others from entering the market to compete with you (perhaps in another field). Remember when Microsoft effectively forced the OEMs not to sell Linux PCs? That's a monopoly at work. Neither Apple nor Ubuntu has that much power.
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna (970587) on Monday February 04, @08:24AM (#22289858) Journal
    MSFT countered the Google announcement that, "What Google is doing is throwing some FUD. Trying to scare people using monopoly, proprietary and other such terms. MSFT considers this tactic illegal, since we have innovated, invented and patented the FUD technique. We consider all forms of FUD dissemination to be an exclusive intellectual property right of MSFT and nobody else has any legitimate claim to it. We will add this to the tally to 293 patent violations against MSFT by Linux and its accomplice Google."
  • Convicted monoply abuser much? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 04, @08:26AM (#22289880)
    So Google voice a legitimate worry about Microsoft, a company convicted of abusing its monopoly status in one market to dominate other markets, buying a company that would give them a large portion of a market and they are the bad guys in this? Lets be honest what Google is saying is the first thing that came to the minds of everyone in IT who are not on the Microsoft payroll. We all know how Microsoft works and we can all hazard a guess at what their aims are in attempting to purchase Yahoo. It is doubtful the good of the internet and consumers are particularly high on their list of priorities.
  • Fixation? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by whisper_jeff (680366) on Monday February 04, @08:37AM (#22289956)
    Google has a Microsoft fixation? Ok, I'm not willing to argue that, but I think the fixation railroad runs both ways. It's pretty obvious that Microsoft is more than a little pre-occupied with Google.
  • What Internet ? (Score:5, Funny)

    by alexhs (877055) on Monday February 04, @08:43AM (#22289988) Homepage Journal

    Google has called Yahoo/Microsoft merger bad for the future of the internet
    Yeah, but who wants an Internet anyway ? Certainly not Microsoft, MPAA or RIAA...

    Microsoft would prefer a controlled^Wsecured Microsoft(r) Inter-Network, let's call it MSN for short :P
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I'm not so sure anyone has a fear of monopolies, as long as they do a decent job. The thing is that when someone/something lacks any competition they tend to lose their drive to better themselves, or maybe just don't realise how much potential they have to
    • by jez9999 (618189) on Monday February 04, @08:39AM (#22289974) Homepage Journal
      Screw whether anyone has a monopoly in the search market; Google frankly deserve that monopoly (not exactly at Windows levels, though; only 75%) because they're THE BEST SEARCH ENGINE.

      Now, if Google bought out Yahoo instead, that would be likely to lead a a lot of positive things:
      - Some degree of maintenance of the Yahoo brand (MS would obliterate it)
      - Promotion of backend opensource architecture (MS would enforce MS products)
      - Less likelihood of services being charged for (MS would ruthlessly monetize all Yahoo services as much as possible)

      Frankly, I just hate Microsoft's whole money-making diversity-killing business ethos, and you have to realise that a MS buyout of Yahoo would be a pretty terrible thing. :-(
        • by BeanThere (28381) on Monday February 04, @10:43AM (#22291768)
          It's a thousand times easier to switch search engines than it is to switch OSs. Google grew very quickly (from nothing) BECAUSE it's such a fungible product and they were so much better. A better search engine could just as easily grab that share away again. (You can't argue 'but, but, value of Google brand' either because Google's brand only became valuable after their search engine became popular, people don't get locked into "brands". And in any case, MS and Yahoo both have well-known brands.)

          In any case, Google's product isn't a search engine, it's online advertising. And also, in any case, it is pretty much hard to argue that Google gained their search monopoly by making the best mousetrap, and that Microsoft gained their Windows monopoly by strategy, lock-in, user ignorance and marketing. It doesn't invalidate anything, wtf!??!
    • by syzler (748241) on Monday February 04, @08:56AM (#22290084)
      The idea that this would make Microsoft a bigger "monopoly" is unfounded because neither Microsoft nor Yahoo! has anywhere close to the highest marketshare of online searches or advertising.

      While I agree that Google almost certainly has the lion's share of searches, the article specifically mentioned IM and e-mail. The majority of the non-techy people I know use either MSN, Yahoo!, or AIM for instant messaging and e-mail. The only people I know using Google Talk are my co-workers and one of my non-techy friends.

      Microsoft will probably not be very willing to work with Google to integrate Google Talk with either MSN IM or Yahoo IM. This will effectively split IM into two camps. In one camp there will be MSN IM and Yahoo! IM. In the other camp you will have Google Talk, AIM, and .Mac. Somewhere between the two camps, probably closer to the the Google/AIM/.Mac camp, will be Jabber services.

      Google is already working to integrate Google Talk with AIM: Time Warner's AOL and Google to Expand Strategic Alliance [google.com]. AIM and .Mac are already talking together: iChat [apple.com]. Since Jabber already works with Google Talk, I would not be surprised if the integration between Google Talk and AIM is done via a Jabber server to server interface which would allow Jabber servers to talk to the AIM network as well.

      From Google's blog:

      Could a combination of the two take advantage of a PC software monopoly to unfairly limit the ability of consumers to freely access competitors' email, IM, and web-based services?

      I too am afraid that Microsoft will attempt to quash any attempts to provide inter operability between different IM providers and will likely succeed since it will control the lion's share of IM accounts. Although Google has the lion's share of the search market, they at least provide or try to provide inter operability with other companies and do not try to lock competitors out of a particular business model.