Top Items:
PR Newswire:
Icahn Sends Open Letter to Board of Directors of Yahoo! — SECURITY HOLDERS ARE ADVISED TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE SOLICITATION OF PROXIES BY Carl C. Icahn AND HIS AFFILIATES FROM THE STOCKHOLDERS OF YAHOO! INC. FOR USE AT ITS ANNUAL MEETING …
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Dear Yahoo: You're Fired — As expected, Carl Icahn presented an alternate slate of directors for the upcoming Yahoo shareholder meeting. The letter to Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock says it all: — Carl C. Icahn — ICAHN CAPITAL LP — 767 Fifth Avenue, 47th Floor — New York, NY 10153
Discussion:
Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog
Lauren Pollock / Wall Street Journal:
Icahn Moves to Oust Yahoo Board — Billionaire Hopes to Revive a Deal with Microsoft — Billionaire investor Carl Icahn officially launched a proxy contest to unseat Yahoo Inc.'s board, writing in a letter to Chairman Roy Bostock “the board of directors of Yahoo has acted irrationally …
Discussion:
BoomTown, ClickZ News Blog, Digital Daily, Between the Lines, All about Microsoft and Tech Confidential
Brian Caulfield / Forbes:
Advice For Jerry Yang
Advice For Jerry Yang
Discussion:
Microsoft Watch, Tech Check with Jim Goldman, The Register, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, TechWag and AppScout
Joseph Weisenthal / paidContent.org:
CBS Acquiring CNET For $1.8 Billion; 44.6 Percent Premium — CBS (NYSE: CBS) is acquiring CNET (NSDQ: CNET) for $1.8 billion in cash. The purchase price comes to $11.50 per share, representing a 44.6 percent premium over last night's closing price of $7.95.
Discussion:
Valleywag, Los Angeles Times, Contentinople, ContentBlogger, CenterNetworks, TG Daily, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, The Register, eWeek, Profy.Com and Mark Evans
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PR Newswire:
CBS Corporation To Acquire CNET Networks, Inc. — CBS to Become a Top Ten U.S. Internet Company with Unparalleled Content and Reach, Boasting Approximately 200 Million Monthly Unique Users Worldwide — CNET Networks' CNET, ZDNet, GameSpot.com, TV.com, CNET News, UrbanBaby, BNET …
Discussion:
Bits, NewTeeVee, GigaOM, Between the Lines, VentureBeat, TechCrunch, IDG News Service, IP Democracy, Mashable!, CenterNetworks, TechBlog, MacUser, Associated Press and 901am
Margaret Kane / CNET News.com:
CBS to buy CNET Networks — CBS has agreed to acquire CNET Networks in a deal valued at $1.8 billion, the companies said Thursday. — The purchase price comes to $11.50 per share, representing a 44 percent premium over Wednesday's closing price of $7.95.
Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
CBS Buying CNET For $1.8 Billion; CBS Predicts $1 Billion Interactive Revenues By 2010 — CBS will pay $11.50 a share for CNET. The all-cash deal represents a premium of 44% above the $7.95 CNET closed at yesterday. Will it be enough to satisfy JANA et al?
Discussion:
paidContent.org, DealBook, TechCrunch, Deal Journal, Techmamas, BeyondVC and The Boy Genius Report
Staci D. Kramer / paidContent.org:
CBS-CNET: Interview: Leslie Moonves, CEO, CBS: 'Right Opportunity …
CBS-CNET: Interview: Leslie Moonves, CEO, CBS: 'Right Opportunity …
Discussion:
Andrew Mager, BoomTown, HipMojo.com, GMSV, Silicon Alley Insider, 24/7 Wall St., Portfolio, Wired News and Online Media Cultist
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Yahoo: I have seen the future of search, and it's ... a monkey? — As the corporate battle for control of Yahoo continues, the company's search team is working busily to make the target of all the backroom shenanigans (namely, Yahoo's search technology and web portal) more powerful by opening it up to third-party developers.
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Yahoo! Search Blog:
The Monkey is Out and the Challenge is On — It's been three weeks since we began the limited preview of Yahoo! Search's new open developer platform, SearchMonkey. Today, we're officially opening up the doors to all developers — professionals and hobbyists — to begin building applications …
Discussion:
Search Engine Watch Blog, Search Engine Land, AppScout, Yahoo! Developer Network blog and WebProNews
Stephen Shankland / Webware.com:
Yahoo beckons coders to gussy up search results
Yahoo beckons coders to gussy up search results
Discussion:
InfoWorld
Paul Miller / The Semantic Web:
Yahoo! frees the Monkey, and announces prizes for a Developer Challenge
Yahoo! frees the Monkey, and announces prizes for a Developer Challenge
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb
Charlie Cheever / Facebook Developers:
Thoughts on Privacy — As developers, you're probably curious about the recent initiatives we and other companies in the industry have taken to help you build applications that let users take their information around the web. We wanted to give you a little more information on how we're thinking …
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
The Social Network Wars Begin In Earnest: Facebook Bans Google Friend Connect — Facebook is all about openness and data portability, as long as that doesn't involve openness or portability of data, it seems. — Today they wrote a long 7 paragraph blog post to get a single point across …
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Anatomy of a rumor: The Atom-powered Newton iPhone — As Winston Churchill might have put it, an Apple rumor can fly halfway around the world before truth has a chance to get its boots on. — Case in point: the iPhone mini-tablet story that broke Wednesday afternoon in Germany.
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Guardian:
How Apple is changing DRM — As more stores and record labels abandon digital rights management, Apple may have an alternative plan for subscription services, writes Tim Anderson — When Apple approached record companies about selling their music digitally five years ago, they …
Discussion:
Podcasting News, PC World, Guardian Unlimited, Insanely Great Mac, Coolfer and MacDailyNews
Henry Blodget / Silicon Alley Insider:
Amazon Kindle a $750 Million iPod-Like Business By 2010 (AMZN) — The Kindle could contribute 3% of Amazon's overall revenue in two years, argues Citi analyst Mark Mahaney, who has a born-again relationship with the device. Combining device and book sales in an iPod/iTunes-like model …
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Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Amazon May Sell $750 Million In Kindles by 2010 (That's A Lot Of Kindles)
Amazon May Sell $750 Million In Kindles by 2010 (That's A Lot Of Kindles)
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
At The Churchill Club: The Top 10 Tech Trends — I'm at the Fairmont Hotel in San Jose tonight, for the Churchill Club's annual Top 10 Tech Trends Dinner. This is the club's 10th annual tech trend panel. Making the picks: — Steve Jurvetson, Draper Fisher Jurvetson. — Vinod Khosla, Khosla Ventures.