Yahoo CEO Mayer: Lack of hardware, software allows for “strong partnerships”

Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer took the reigns of the company back in July, and it’s been a busy time for her and the company so far. Mayer has made quite a bit of changes, including hiring a new head for Yahoo’s Flickr division, as well as giving all employees a new company smartphone. The CEO also just did her first television interview with Bloomberg, and she revealed some details about the company and reflected on her time so far as CEO.

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Over the course of the 30-minute interview, Mayer talked about Yahoo’s mobile strategy, the company’s culture, and the future of technology. When asked how a company like Yahoo competes in a technology industry where mobile reigns, Mayer said that, since Yahoo doesn’t make mobile hardware, a mobile OS, a browser, or a social network, it allows the company more opportunities “for strong partnerships.” Mayer says that Yahoo will be mainly focused on building relationships and creating partnerships with other companies.

She also discussed the impact that Yahoo is making in the mobile realm, and said that the company is also focused on pushing out content to mobile users. Yahoo already has apps for iOS and Android, and Mayer thinks that Yahoo can become part of users’ “daily habits,” which can “provide a lot of value to the end user,” while also providing value to the company.

Mayer also talked about company culture, and while she shook things up by cleaning house, she was adamant about “building the right team.” As for the future of the company, Mayer is really interested in personalization, such as image recognition, voice recognition, and translation. She says that it’s all about “being able to take personalized notions,” such as likes on Facebook, tweets, articles, etc., “and taking all those signals and mapping those to understand, for example, I like clean energy on Facebook and I tweet out something about green energy, that is in fact the same interest as mine.”

[via Business Insider]


Yahoo CEO Mayer: Lack of hardware, software allows for “strong partnerships” is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Bloomberg: Yahoo, Dell, and Google Are Dodging Taxes In the Netherlands

You associate the Netherlands with Tulips and THC, not tax-evasion, but that’s exactly what some tech companies are using the country for. According to Bloomberg, Yahoo, Dell, and Google have set up offices in Holland in order to take advantage of the country’s lenient tax laws and funnel millions and millions of dollars into off-shore subsidiaries. More »

Yahoo Acquires Snip.It

Snip.It Yahoo Acquires Snip.ItYahoo has acquired social platform Snip.it, the Internet giant made the official announcement on Tuesday. In case you didn’t know, Snip.it is a social tool that lets users collect images, videos, and articles on the web. If that sounds familiar to you, think of Pinterest on steroids. Yahoo reportedly acquired Snip.it at an estimated amount of $10 million in total. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Pirate Bay Documentary Becomes First Film To Premier Online At Berlinale Festival, Mozilla To Bring Firefox To Ouya,

Yahoo Now Shows Image Search Results From Flickr

SearchImage Yahoo Now Shows Image Search Results From FlickrYahoo is announcing today via its blog that its search engine will now include image search results from its very own image hosting and video hosting service, Flickr. This is definitely good news, since this will make it easier for all Yahoo users to find and share photos on the web. Basically, the newly added feature on its search engine will allow users to browse through photos from Flickr – photos that are essentially available for re-use or re-posting under its Creative Commons terms. (more…)

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Editorial: FTC and Google — why the right decision feels so wrong to so many people

Editorial FTC and Google  why the right decision feels so wrong to so many people

The Federal Trade Commission’s absolution of Google after a lengthy investigation into alleged abuse of market power induced expected reactions from the principle players. Microsoft was infuriated. Google was triumphant and exuberantly overstated the FTC’s exit. (“Google’s services are good for users and good for competition.”) Lawyers and lobbyists bunched on both sides of the fence to issue scathing or praiseful statements. The court of common opinion is now divided between nodding approval and eviscerating censure. The comment hate being hurled at Google is partly derived from general monopoly-busting sentiment, but there is also a stuck-in-the-past misunderstanding of what Google has become.

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These Sites Violate Your Privacy

The Wall Street Journal has analyzed the top 50 sites in the United States plus 20 other top sites in sensitive categories like dating or health. They found that 25 of these sites—including OKCupid, Pinterest, YouTube, Yahoo—send personal data to other sites in the open, with no security encoding, using your own browser session. More »

12 Tech Heroes of 2012

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Yahoo & NBC Sports Sign New Content Deal

Sports fans will be happy to hear that Yahoo is partnering with NBC to deliver the best in the world of sports. The content and promotional deal will combine Yahoo! Sports’s reporting expertise, coverage of big events, and popular fantasy sports products with NBC Sports’s digital assets as well as television promotion and integration.

One the features that we can expect from the content deal is editorial depth, thanks to the award-winning reporters and commentators from both companies. Another feature expected are new video programming concepts from Yahoo! Sports and NBC Sports that are basically original made-for-web video programs.

The deal will also bring NBC Sports’s Live Extra video player into Yahoo! Sports, so that fans can watch live streams of some of NBC’s biggest events such as the Sunday Night Football and NHL Game of the Week. The content deal also brings the fantasy platform of Yahoo! Sports into NBC Sports’ Rotoworld, and Rivals.com , the college sports destination, will be giving recruiting and college sporting news for NBCSports.com. NBC’s Alli Sports and NBC Sports Regional Networks will also be added into Yahoo! Sports.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Twitter Rolls Out New Profile Updates To All Users On December 12 , Bing Launches ‘People’, ‘Landmarks’ Categories To Snapshot,

Yahoo and NBC Sports announce partnership

Yahoo and NBC Sports have announced that they will be teaming up on sports reporting, broadcasts, and news coverage. The two companies have a goal of creating the largest dedicated sports news platforms in the US. According to the announcement, Yahoo Sports will combine its “premium sports news and events coverage” with the NBC Sports Groups digital brand and TV promotion and integration.

Both of the companies will continue to maintain different websites and newsrooms. Yahoo reports that the deal will see Yahoo’s most popular sports content and products integrated into NBC’s online offerings. The two companies are also expecting to run a joint advertising campaign across sites they both operate.

Specific areas that the two companies will collaborate on will include editorial commentary, investigative reporting, and original video programming. They will also team up on live streaming of sporting events and fantasy sports. Yahoo Sports will be the exclusive fantasy game provider of NBC Sports Rotoworld.

The deal between Yahoo and NBC sports is the latest to come under CEO Marissa Meyer’s leadership. Since she took over the CEO position, Yahoo has launched new deals with Samsung that will bring Yahoo Broadcasts Interactivity service to Samsung smart TVs. Yahoo has also signed a deal with CBS Television Distribution to extend the reach of a syndicated newsmagazine called The Insider among other deals.

[via TheNextWeb]


Yahoo and NBC Sports announce partnership is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

NBC Sports and Yahoo Sports cut a deal to fuse internet, TV coverage

NBC Sports and Yahoo Sports cut a deal to fuse internet, TV coverage

While Yahoo has had a tumultuous last few years, one unit that has consistently been at the top of the heap is its sports news division. At the same time, NBC Sports has been getting a boost — even without the NHL’s help — ever since Comcast bought NBCUniversal. Apparently between Yahoo’s need to better leverage its media properties and NBC’s free agency after calling it quits with Microsoft the two have found common ground and struck a deal. Although both websites will continue to operate independently, expect multi-platform crossover between TV and internet, cross-promotion with links to NBC Sports Live Extra streams from within Yahoo, new made-for-the-internet video shows combining their assets and Yahoo’s fantasy sports will be the exclusive game for NBC’s Rotoworld site. Check after the break for the press release and a heads up on why even non-sports fans that pay for TV may need to keep an eye on this move.

Continue reading NBC Sports and Yahoo Sports cut a deal to fuse internet, TV coverage

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