Monthly Archives: September 2008

European Union Reviewing Google-Yahoo Partnership

The European Union opened a review into the Google-Yahoo search advertising partnership in July, according to Los Angeles Times article. The planned partnership is only in the United States and Canada, but Jonathan Todd, a spokesman for the European Union’s competition commission, told the Times that “since the two companies do business in Europe, the cooperation could violate European Commission rules on anti-competitive practices, such as price-fixing and sharing of sensitive business information.” Todd also said that the review “would focus on the possible effects of the deal on European Commission rules relating to restrictive business practices.” Last week the U.S. Justice Department hired lawyer Sanford Litvack in preparation for a possible challenge to the partnership.

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Intent Data Focused Ad Exchange Launched Today

BlueKai, which claims to be the first intent data focused ad exchange, launched today. They will act as the middleman in auctions between publishers selling data on consumer’s purchase-driven behaviors and advertisers and ad networks buying the data to target advertising. The data will be based on cookies and participants in the network will be required not to combine the data with personally identifiable information. According to a CNET News article, BlueKai’s CEO Omar Tawakol compared the company to “the idea to the direct mail marketing business. Offline, marketers call up a data company like Axciom to buy the names and addresses of household decision makers in a certain ZIP code, for example. Then they would take that data and create a campaign.” While the company claims to have a number of the top 10 ad networks and publishers, so far only Autobytel and online video advertiser Tremor Media have been mentioned publicly.

The company is also touting what it calls “polite marketing”, providing consumers information and control over what information is collected from their data providers. The company also will give rewards in the form of charitable donations to consumer for maintaining data on the site.

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Google Reiterates Lack of Duplicate Content Penalty in Google Search

In a posting on Official Google Webmaster Central Blog, Webmaster Central

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Justice Department May Be Preparing Challenge to Google-Yahoo Partnership

The Wall Street Journal reported yesterday that the U.S. Justice Department has hired a well-known lawyer for a possible antitrust lawsuit against Google. The lawyer, Sanford Litvack, was the Justice Department antitrust chief for President Jimmy Carter as well as a former vice chairman of Disney and partner at law firm Hogan & Hartson. The report says that it is not clear if the possible challenge would be to the Google-Yahoo search advertising partnership alone or if it would encompass Google’s overall online-advertising business. Lawyers familiar with the review told the Journal that “For weeks, U.S. lawyers have been deposing witnesses and issuing subpoenas for documents to support a challenge to the deal.”

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Yahoo Hires New U.S. Advertising Sales Chief

Yahoo has hired a new advertising chief, Joanne Bradford will be in charge of U.S. Sales, taking over for David Karnstedt who has resigned, as well as Market Development for Advertisers, Small Business, and Yahoo! HotJobs. Bradford most recently work for advertising agency Spot Runner, she had previously be in the corporate vice president of Global Sales and Marketing and chief media revenue officer for Microsoft’s digital advertising network.

Source: Yahoo Press Release

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Comcast Appeals FCC Net Neutrality Related Sanctions

The New York Times Bits Blog reports that Comcast filed a suit in the United States Court of Appeals in Washington to challenge the FCC’s sanctions over it’s throttling of certain protocols on customers connections. Comcast is challenging the FCC’s ability to sanctions companies without first publishing a rule about the issue at hand. Under the current FCC chairman Kevin Martin, the FCC has published broad principles and has only taken action when it finds practices it objects to. Comcast complains that by bypassing formal rules, their ability to put forth their side of issue is restricted.

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NebuAd Suspends Controversial Advertising Technology

The Washington Post reports that NebuAd has suspended it controversial advertising technology. The technology uses deep-packet inspection to monitor all unencrypted traffic through an internet connection to gather information to target adds. Publicity, including an inquiry by the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee, led to ISP’s participating with NebuAd to suspend their use of the technology. In an email to the Post company spokeswoman Janet McGraw indicated that the company was looking to channels other than ISPs to deploy the technology. Earlier in the week, the company announced the CEO Bob Dykes was stepping down from that post.

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Google Releasing Web Browser

In a post on the Official Google Blog, Google has announced that they will be releasing their own web browser. The browser, called Google Chrome, is built on the WebKit rendering engine used in Apple’s Safari. The browser uses a V8, a JavaScript engine developed by Google, that Google says is designed to “power the next generation of web applications that aren’t even possible in today’s browsers”. A beta version for Windows will be released shortly, with Mac and Linux versions in the works.

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