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Microsoft Businesses EU

Microsoft Officially Closes Its $26.2B Acquisition of LinkedIn (techcrunch.com) 53

After getting its final European Commission approvals earlier this week, Microsoft and LinkedIn today announced that Microsoft's $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn, the social networking site, has officially closed. From a report on TechCrunch: The news comes six months after news first broke of the deal. In an internal memo, LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner went through the areas where the two companies would be working together, and how they will in other ways remain independent. LinkedIn today has over 400 million registered users, making it the largest social networking site focused on the working world. People use the service both to make work connections with other people in their fields, but also to look for jobs and hire people. As we reported earlier this week, the fact that LinkedIn essentially has a dominant position in this area meant that Microsoft had to make concessions to the EC about how it would work to allow other social networking sites to integrate on its platforms.
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Microsoft Officially Closes Its $26.2B Acquisition of LinkedIn

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  • by The-Ixian ( 168184 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @10:54AM (#53446057)

    Not sure that I am super pleased about the MS takeover but I am certainly glad it wasn't Salesforce...

    • Probably should have done it sooner.

      • I have deleted my account multiple times, but they keep resurrecting it every time some random person wants to connect with me, and the only way to ask them to stop requires having an active account (and is very cumbersome, by the way). When I send or receive private e-mails to/from a new person (not using any web service), I often receive another e-mail soon thereafter from LinkedIn recommending that I connect with that person. Fortunately, this merger doesn't cross any lines regarding evil behavior.
  • Embrace, Extend, Extinguish
    • I am half convinced that the three Es aren't intentional, but rather the result of really bad management decisions.

      Any significant level of incompetence, is indistinguishable from malice. (apologies to Arthur C Clarke)

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        I am half convinced that the three Es aren't intentional, but rather the result of really bad management decisions.

        Maybe the first two Es are intentional, and the 3rd one is accidental......

    • They learned the lesson from Yahoo. If you've got a company with no business plan and no idea how to eventually become profitable - if somebody offers you huge piles of money for it, you don't turn it down... you take the money and run.

  • Maybe (Score:5, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @10:59AM (#53446091) Homepage Journal
    Maybe they can now help me find a job through LinkedIn. I am an expert in Rust and Swift.
  • ... in the last week or so its changed so you now need an account on linkedin (or facebook) to be able to view anyones profile at all, never mind the details. I'm sure that has nothing whatsoever to do with MS wishing to get as much user data as possible.

  • by mujadaddy ( 1238164 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @11:05AM (#53446121)
    I was looking to hire a few dozen Social Media Experts before the end of the year.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @11:07AM (#53446133)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • what difference does it make? That's the trouble with letting these Mega-corps keep all their profits instead of taxing the heck out of 'em. It sounds good on paper (after all, who are we to take somebody's money from them) but when they start throwing all that weight around you mega merger after mega merger. And thanks to upcomming changes in tax law they're about to bring 1 trillion back to the country and use most of it for mergers & acquisitions. We'll be seeing a massing round of layoffs over the n
    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      LinkedIn today has over 400 million registered users

      how many people have been active in the past 30-60 days and the level of activity of these accounts is always more useful than raw statistics. many of these are likely bots and callcenter employees.

      I only bother with Linked In when I'm looking for work. For my career (tehcnology) it hasn't got any more use than something an employer or recruiter checks before calling you. So you make sure it's clean and presentable.

      However for less... shall we say... practical careers like sales, marketing and HR they apparently use it quite a lot.

      I feel microsoft has made another blunder.

      Microsoft isn't exactly hurting. They've got money to burn and this is probably going to end up costing them less than their Games and Entertainment division that they'r

    • First it was Minecraft for billions, and its a great deal until you realize most people playing minecraft already gave their money to notch, and that theres no real way to monetize it

      Education contracts and HoloLens
  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @11:09AM (#53446137)

    This is great news... ... I always hated LinkedIn, now I know it'll be gone in 5 years.

  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @12:15PM (#53446535)

    Microsoft could use the LinkedIn platform to sell ads, and do targeted "advice placements" from weasels like Gartner, but there's also an interesting company-focused opportunity. If they can guarantee that users work for a company (maybe through O365 logins, or Azure AD joins of Win10 machines users post from?) they can sell behavior monitoring of a company's employees. HR departments would probably pay dearly to find out who's looking for work, likely so they can increase their efforts in managing them out, but maybe to signal to managers that something's not right. Companies might also want to use analytics to make better guesses on how much other people are getting paid for the positions they're offering. Right now, there's so much secrecy around salaries, and companies would love any tool that allows them to prevent giving out the occasional above-average offer just because they don't have perfect information.

    I work on the systems architect side of IT, so I do both technical and some business work and I see how both groups of people use LinkedIn. For those who use it, techies use LinkedIn as an always-updated resume and contact list. Business types, especially marketers or consultants use it as a narcissistic self-promotion tool, more like Facebook than a utility service. I run in the techie circles but have plenty of LinkedIn contacts from the other side -- it's amusing to watch them posting some lofty inspirational MBA article, then falling all over each other to shower praise for their contact's "visionary thinking" etc. It's a useful display of the other side's typical behavior, and a good indication of how much a technical opinion of any kind is going to be respected. (Hint, to make a technical argument with a business person you have to wrap it in all the MBA and consulting BS these LinkedIn narcissists post.)

    So yeah, I'm not 100% sure what Microsoft's got planned for LinkedIn, but I think they're just trying to gather up as much data as they can to feed the analytics machine. The Watson-style AI being sold by IBM and friends to gullible executives is this decade's free money machine for management consultants. Remember, if you can't measure it you can't manage it!

  • I guess MS is greasing Slashdot's palms quite thoroughly these days. It should be renamed Backslashdot, to be more open about who is the master.
  • useless site (Score:3, Insightful)

    by qQ7eBMsfM5gs ( 4756041 ) on Thursday December 08, 2016 @01:05PM (#53446857) Journal
    Useless site. None of positions I've occupied since I've been on LinkedIn (in 2005?) came from LinkedIn. All articles I've ever read there were of traditional genres of "mastering the obvious" or stupid motivational tantra. All direct spam and phishing I received since I've been on LinkedIn came from LinkedIn. Microsoft once again has been up to its reputation of being managed by dimwits.
  • Twenty mentions of Microsoft on the front page, since when did this become the Microsoft Slashdot?

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