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Green light for Google's acquisition of Admeld
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 2, 2011

Google mulling online retail move: report
San Francisco (AFP) Dec 1, 2011 - Internet powerhouse Google is in talks with major retailers about an online shopping service that would deliver purchases to buyers within 24 hours, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

Such a service would be a direct challenge to e-commerce king Amazon.com, which promises one- to two-day delivery on purchases by people who pay $79 annually to be members of a Prime program that comes with added perks.

Google has reportedly reached out to major US retail businesses, including Macy's, OfficeMax and Gap Inc.

"They've approached us with the idea, but we haven't made any decisions," a Macy's spokesman told the Journal.

Amazon has been gaining ground in the online advertising market as shoppers use the online retailer's website for searches instead of Google or other services. Online ads are Google's main source of revenue.

Amazon's influence is growing with the allure of online videos and other content for Prime members.

Google, on the other hand, has been weighing into the online retail market with features such as coupons for deals at local businesses and Android smartphones that can double as electronic wallets to pay in stores.


Google's bid for a bigger slice of the display advertising market received a boost Friday as the Justice Department gave the green light to its $400 million purchase of online ad company Admeld.

The Justice Department said a review of the transaction by its antitrust division had concluded it was "not likely to substantially lessen competition in the sale of display advertising."

"Although the Antitrust Division concluded that this particular transaction was unlikely to cause consumer harm, the division will continue to be vigilant in the enforcement of the antitrust laws to protect competition in display and other forms of online advertising," the department added in a statement.

The Mountain View, California-based Google has come in for increasing regulatory review in the United States and Europe as it has grown from a scrappy startup into an Internet titan.

Google makes most of its money from advertising tied to Internet search but has been seeking to increase its share of the growing market for display ads, which include rich media, digital video and banners.

Google announced the acquisition of Admeld, which provides an online display advertising platform for publishers, in June. The exact purchase price was not revealed but various reports put it at around $400 million.

The Justice Department said it examined whether the purchase of Admeld "would enable Google to extend its market power in the Internet search industry to online display advertising through anticompetitive means."

It said the investigation determined that Web publishers tend to rely on multiple display advertising platforms, lessening the "risk that the market will tip to a single dominant platform."

Google welcomed the Justice Department's clearance of the deal.

"We'll close the acquisition in the coming days and then start the real work -- building improved products and services that help our publisher partners to make more informed decisions across all their ad space, and to grow their revenues," Google's vice president of display advertising Neal Mohan said.

"The opportunity for major online publishers is huge... and growing," Mohan said in a blog post. "We envisage a much simpler system that enables publishers to manage and sell their ad space -- across desktop, video, mobile, tablets and more."

According to the Interactive Advertising Bureau and PricewaterhouseCoopers, US online advertising revenue rose 15 percent last year to a record $26 billion with display ads accounting for 38 percent of the total.

According to digital marketing firm eMarketer, Facebook is on track to pass Yahoo! in US display advertising revenue this year while Google will also gain market share.

Facebook's share of US online display ad revenue will grow to 17.7 percent this year, up from 12.2 percent last year, while Yahoo!'s share is expected to decline to 13.1 percent in 2011 from 14.4 percent last year, eMarketer said.

Google's share of US display advertising revenue will grow to 9.3 percent this year from 8.6 percent last year, eMarketer said.

Other large Google deals that have drawn scrutiny from the US authorities are its $3.1 billion purchase of online ad firm DoubleClick, its $750 million buy of mobile ad network AdMob and its $700 million acquisition of flight data company ITA Software.

In 2008, Google was forced to drop plans for a joint search advertising partnership with Yahoo! amid opposition from the Justice Department.

Google is also currently cooperating with a US Federal Trade Commission probe into its search and advertising business.

Founded in 2007, Admeld describes its mission on its website as providing publishers with "the cutting edge of advertising technology, enabling them to maximize their revenue and sell their inventory smarter and safer."

Besides its headquarters in New York, the company also has offices in San Francisco, London, Berlin and Toronto.

Admeld's 500 customers around the world include FOX News, Hearst Television, Discovery and The Weather Channel.

Google shares were up 1.22 percent at $621.24 in afternoon trading on Wall Street.

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SAP buys US software company SuccessFactors for $3.4 bln
Berlin (AFP) Dec 3, 2011 - Germany's SAP, a software company specialising in human resources functions, on Saturday announced it was to acquire US company SuccessFactors for $3.4 billion.

Under the deal, an American subsidiary will pay $40 per share in cash for SuccessFactors, 52 percent more than the closing stock price on Friday, a statement said.

The deal is the latest development in the growing rivalry between SAP and competitor Oracle.

Facebook to hire 'thousands' over next year
New York (AFP) Dec 2, 2011 - Facebook said Friday that it plans to hire thousands of employees over the next year and add an engineering team to its office in New York.

"We will hire as many high quality engineers as we can here in New York," Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg told reporters at an event also attended by New York mayor Michael Bloomberg.

"We're going to grow as quickly as we can in New York," Sandberg said.

She said Facebook would also be adding engineers at its Palo Alto, California, headquarters and in Seattle in addition to New York.

An engineering team in New York would be the company's first outside of the West Coast.

Facebook, which has more than 800 million members and is expected to go public next year, currently employs some 3,000 people

Sandberg said Facebook had plans to dramatically expand its overall workforce.

"We will be adding thousands of employees in the next year," she said.

Facebook currently has around 100 employees in its New York offices. Most of them work in marketing and recruiting.

Sandberg declined to say how exactly many people Facebook planned to employ in New York. But she said the company will probably need more office space.

Facebook currently has an office on Madison Avenue.



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AOL's Steve Case launches $450 mn investment fund
Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2011
AOL co-founder Steve Case and two former top AOL executives announced Thursday they have raised $450 million to invest in start-ups located outside of Silicon Valley. The Revolution Growth fund will focus on building "innovative, high-growth companies" with typical investments of $25 million to $50 million, the Washington-based group said in a statement. Case's partners in the fund are f ... read more


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