Big boost for Bing in Yahoo-Microsoft pact
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| San Francisco
Two months after Bing bounced onto the Internet, Microsoft鈥檚 rebranded search engine leaped a lot closer on Wednesday morning to posing a serious challenge to the online Goliath Google.
In a deal with Yahoo, Bing will soon become its search provider, gobbling up a huge chunk of Web traffic in one bite. In exchange for letting Microsoft handle Yahoo searches, Yahoo will get 88 percent of the search-generated ad revenue from its sites in the first five years of the 10-year pact.
That could bring in as much as $500 million to the pioneering Internet company that in recent years has been struggling to reposition itself and hand Microsoft Yahoo鈥檚 20 percent share of Internet search traffic. Still, the combination of Yahoo (the No. 2 search engine) and Microsoft (No. 3 with 8.4 percent) is a long way from reversing Google鈥檚 65 percent share.
The deal promises to be a boon for both companies (if it鈥檚 approved by federal regulators) as Microsoft wants to pry Internet users away from Google, and Yahoo is interested in focusing on building up its media sites from finance to sports. But so far Microsoft appears to be coming out ahead of this deal connecting Silicon Valley with Redmond, Wash.
While Yahoo Chief Executive Carol Bartz said the pact promises a 鈥渂oatload of cash,鈥 it saw shares drop 8 percent on news of the partnership. Meanwhile, software giant Microsoft saw a slight uptick in the price of its stock.
Microsoft has long had its sites set on Yahoo in its quest to get into the lucrative search business. Last year Microsoft attempted a $47.5 billion takeover of the online company. That bid was eventually withdrawn and was met with antitrust complaints from Google.
It鈥檚 unknown what sort of defense, if any, Google will mount to the Yahoo-Microsoft pact, which could build a powerful and wealthy search engine-advertising venture and chip away at Google鈥檚 dominance in the $12 billion a year search engine business.
But as Bing is elbowing its way into Google鈥檚 turf, Google has been making inroads into Microsoft鈥檚 territory, too. It鈥檚 developing a free operating system, known as Chrome, that could cost Microsoft鈥檚 Windows some market share.
How this new pact will reshape tech business is still unclear. But for the immediate future it won't mean much for users of Yahoo or Bing because much of the combined technologies will effect behind-the-scenes operations. But it does indicate that Yahoo is getting out of the search business and Microsoft is fully committed to its new Internet business.
Whether the deal eats away at Google鈥檚 core business by stealing significant market share remains to be seen, says TechCrunch blogger Robin Wauters. 鈥淏ut the fact that Bing will be the exclusive algorithmic search and paid search platform for Yahoo sites confirms the notion that Sunnyvale has indeed given up on search in a big way.鈥
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