Tuesday, March 29, 2005

U.S. Internet Companies Face Challenges Abroad

(Dow Jones)--Companies looking to boost their online business by expanding abroad need to be realistic about the challenges they face, including brand translation, marketing and costs, according to independent research firm Forrester Research Inc. (FORR).

With online sales in the U.S. maturing, retailers are looking to other parts of the world for some of their growth, said Forrester Research analyst Carrie Johnson in a recent report about companies taking their online sales abroad.

While U.S. online sales should have a compounded annual growth rate of 14% during the next five years, those sales in Europe will have a growth rate of 33%, Forrester said.

European retailers are looking to get their share of customers in the U.S. because European consumers are slower to adopt online shopping compared with their U.S. counterparts, the company said. That's led U.S. retailers to feelhey need to be global.

Having online sales is also a cheaper avenue for establishing a brand presence compared with building a store, and it's a good way to test a country's interest, the report said.

Regions that have potential include Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe and India, the Forrester report said. Expanding abroad, however, isn't without hurdles. Branding and marketing are "hands down" the biggest challenges, Johnson said. "It's not a technology issue or a management issue, but whether your brand translates there and how much it costs," she said.

Retailers, especially those without the brand recognition and worldwide presence of the most well-known companies, need to evaluate existing brand awareness and the competition before going into new markets, Forrester's report said. U.S. companies spend millions in online marketing as well as existing channels and brand strength to fuel their online sales, the report said. Those companiesalso need to have big budgets when they go abroad.

For online jeweler Blue Nile Inc. (NILE), the costliest aspect of doing business outside the U.S. is technology, Chief Executive Mark Vadon said. "When you look at moving from a single Web site to multiple sites with local content, you have those multiple sites running off a single platform," he said. "You need some local presence, you need fulfillment, but a significant piece of the cost is technology." Blue Nile had been selling items to Canadians from its U.S. Web site for a couple years but launched a stand-alone site for Canada in January. It launched a site in the U.K. last fall without any marketing muscle to see what interest the site would garner. Sales are doing well enough that Blue Nile plans to havea full site in the U.K. by the fourth quarter, Vadon said.

There are other challenges for companies beyond brand translation and costs. One is language. When eBay Inc. (EBAY) launches a site in another country, it has to make sure the language on that site is "contextually correct," spokesman Henry Gomez said.

"There are local people doing the translating because there are nuances to any language," Gomez said. "EBay is instantly local, so much of that issue is solved by users when they list items on the site, but we need to make sure thenavigation and the words we use are appropriate for the market."

EBay has local sites in several countries, including Germany, India, Italy and South Korea, as well as the U.K. Retailers also need to be aware of differences in taxes, duties, accounting, legal issues and shipping regulations. In addition, companies need to know local customs and traditions, Blue Nile's Vadon said.

eBay Says Patent Office Revokes MercExchange Patent

Reuters) - eBay Inc. EBAY said

on Tuesday that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has

preliminarily revoked a patent that is the basis for a $25

million patent-infringement judgment against the Web

marketplace.

EBay said the decision from the patent office covers the

entirety of the consignment fixed-price patent numbered

5,845,265, which is owned by Thomas Woolston, principal of

MercExchange.

MercExchange, a tiny e-commerce technology developer that

has been locked in a multiyear patent battle with eBay, will

have an opportunity to respond to the initial ruling out of the

patent office.

The patent examiner handling this MerchExchange patent

could not immediately be reached for comment.

A federal judge in 2003 ordered eBay to pay Virginia-based

MercExchange $29.5 million for infringing e-commerce patents

that MercExchange charged were key to eBay's "Buy it Now"

feature. Buy it Now accounted for about 31 percent of the total

value of goods sold on eBay in the fourth quarter of last

year.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit earlier

this month upheld the $25 million damage judgment against eBay

related to the above-mentioned patent and cleared the way for a

permanent injunction related to the dispute.

"These rejections are a major new factor that the court

will have to consider," said Jay Monahan, eBay's vice president

of intellectual property, referring to the initial decision out

of the patent office.

Woolston said in a statement that MercExchange still plans

to seek an injunction against eBay and added that he remains

confident that MercExchange will prevail.

"We will deal with this office action, like all previous

office actions during the prosecution of our patents, in the

ordinary course," Woolston added.

EBay previously has said that an injunction would not have

an impact on its business because of changes it has made during

the course of the litigation.

Shares of eBay were up 16 cents, to $36.07, in late

afternoon trade on the Nasdaq.

((Reporting by Lisa Baertlein, editing by Martin Golan;

Reuters Messaging: lisa.baertlein.reuters.com@reuters.net; +1

415-677-2549))

Monday, March 28, 2005

Chinese Internet Stocks Impacted by Shanda’s Move

(From THE ASIAN WALL STREET JOURNAL)

By Rebecca Buckman

Hong Kong -- SEVERAL CHINESE Internet stocks have taken off in recent weeks

following news that online-gaming giant Shanda Interactive Entertainment could

make a play for Chinese Web portal Sina.

Now, some investors reckon other companies, including portals Netease.com and

Sohu.com, could be takeover targets as well.

But don't bet on it. While some analysts tout Netease's prospects, others say

the best buys in the Chinese Internet business right now might be Web outfits

that don't figure into takeover talk and whose shares haven't gotten a lift

lately -- including smaller companies that provide entertainment and other

services to mobile-phone users.

Among such companies are Beijing-based Tom Online, backed by Hong Kong tycoon

Li Ka-shing, and Linktone, headquartered in Shanghai and run by Silicon

Valley-trained entrepreneur Raymond Yang.

The wireless-Internet sector in China has been extremely risky, and some big

investors still won't touch it. The main damper has been a continued regulatory

crackdown by the Chinese government, which has been trying for nearly a year to

stamp unethical marketing and billing practices in the industry.

One bad practice, for example, involves making it difficult for users to halt

subscriptions to certain mobile services, such as special "ring tones," or even

horoscopes delivered to wireless phones. (Some people unwittingly signed up for

the services after receiving "spam" e-mail on their phones, and then had no

idea how to cancel them.) The government crackdown has dented profits at

several mobile-content companies.

But much of the cleanup is now done, and China's wireless market remains huge,

with more than 330 million subscribers. While the market has been volatile for

some of the stocks, "things will stabilize," predicts William Bao Bean, an

analyst with Deutsche Bank in Hong Kong. "The underlying point is that demand

for these services is still quite strong."

Indeed, Tom Online, a company that derives about 92% of its revenue from

wireless services, earlier this month reported a 73% profit increase for 2004,

despite the regulatory clampdown. Linktone recently said profit for the quarter

ended Dec. 31 more than doubled from a year earlier.

In a research note in February, analysts Safa Rashtchy and Aaron M. Kessler of

U.S. investment bank Piper Jaffray called Tom Online "one of the most

undervalued stocks in our China universe." At the time, the stock was trading

at about 14 times calendar year 2005 earnings, compared with 45 times 2005

earnings for Shanda and 20 times for Sohu. China's wireless sector remains "a

major opportunity," the analysts wrote.

Since mid-February -- when Shanda unexpectedly said it had taken a 19.5% stake

in Sina and might try to take a controlling interest in the company -- shares

of both Linktone and Tom Online have stayed roughly flat.

Meanwhile, shares of Netease.com, which is a Web portal like Sina, have surged

15% and Sohu.com's stock price has climbed nearly 14% -- driven higher partly

by investor speculation that the companies could be takeover targets.

Still, many analysts are taking a wait-and-see attitude on Sohu.com's

prospects. Since early 2004, the company has lost some top executives including

its chief financial officer and Victor Koo, its president and chief operating

officer. In November, Sohu.com said that Mr. Koo would leave his post by the

end of this month, although he will stay on temporarily as a consultant. A

company spokeswoman says Sohu.com has managed "smooth transitions" through the

departures and has capable and experienced managers at lower levels.

But Sohu.com, the No. 2 portal player behind Sina, also has struggled to build

top-notch search and online-games businesses, says Duncan Clark, a partner with

consulting firm BDA China Ltd. in Beijing. The company needs to rebuild its

management ranks and refocus is strategy -- or else "look at a partnership or

be sold," he says.

Mr. Clark and some investors don't think Sohu.com's founder and chairman,

Charles Zhang, will ever sell out. Mr. Zhang still owns 25% of the company and

Sohu.com has had a "poison pill" takeover-defense plan in place for years. "I'm

not sure they're going to be taken over," says Jerry Zhang, an analyst with

Evergreen Investments in Boston who is no relation to the Sohu.com chairman.

Indeed, in an interview, Charles Zhang said he, "the management, and the board

are very unified to . . . remain independent." Netease.com, too, is still

controlled by its founder, board member William Ding.

Analysts say founder control means a suitor isn't likely to snap up

Netease.com anytime soon, either. But unlike Sohu.com, Netease is excelling in

the hot area of creating online games and could be a good buy all by itself. In

2005, revenue from games could provide 80% of company sales, according to Piper

Jaffray.

J.P.Morgan has an "overweight" rating on Netease.com while Piper Jaffray rates

it "outperform" with a US$63 price target. Last Thursday, in their latest

trading, Netease.com's American depositary receipts closed at $45.50.

Some analysts say smaller Chinese Internet players shouldn't be overlooked,

either. Tom Online, with backing from companies controlled by Hong Kong tycoon

Mr. Li, could turn into an acquirer and build itself into a bigger, more

diverse Internet player. It recently bought 80% of Indian mobile-gaming company

Indiagames Ltd.

Linktone, while it remains relatively small, saw its sales triple during 2004

to reach $50 million The company is also moving into new types of wireless

businesses that haven't been targeted as much by regulators from the Chinese

government.

Indeed, despite changes in the regulatory environment, wireless content

remains "a profitable, sustainable business model" in phone-happy China, says

Wang Lei Lei, Tom Online's CEO.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

Google Buys Urchin Software

Google Inc.

(NASDAQ:GOOG) today announced it has agreed to acquire Urchin Software

Corporation, a San Diego, California based web analytics company.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Urchin is a web site analytics solution used by web site owners and marketers

to better understand their users' experiences, optimize content and track

marketing performance. Urchin tools are available as a hosted service, a

software product and through large web hosting providers. These products are

used by thousands of popular sites on the Internet.

Google plans to make these tools available to web site owners and marketers to

better enable them to increase their advertising return on investment and make

their web sites more effective.

"We want to provide web site owners and marketers with the information they

need to optimize their users' experience and generate a higher

return-on-investment from their advertising spending," said Jonathan Rosenberg,

vice president of product management, Google. "This technology will be a

valuable addition to Google's suite of advertising and publishing products."

The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions. Google anticipates

that the acquisition will close before the end of April.

Web Analytics Sold to Private Equity Fund

(Reuters) - NetIQ Corp. NTIQ said

on Monday it inked a deal to sell WebTrends, its Web analytics

business, to Francisco Partners for about $94 million in cash.

The sale is expected to close by June 30.

Francisco Partners, a private equity fund, said it will run

WebTrends as a stand-alone company.

WebTrends supplies technology and services to measure and

improve the performance of Web marketing campaigns such as those

run on Internet search providers Google Inc. GOOG and Yahoo

Inc. YHOO.

Greg Drew, WebTrends' general manager, will become president

and chief executive of WebTrends after the sale.

Software maker NetIQ said it is selling WebTrends because it

is not part of its system and security management strategy.

Shares of NetIQ closed down 15 cents to $10.85 on the Nasdaq.

NetFlix Has More Than 3M Subs

(Reuters) - Netflix Inc. NFLX said on Monday it has more than 3 million subscribers to its online DVD rental service, with over 400,000 signing up so far this year and putting it on track to reach its target of 4 million by year-end. Shares of Netflix rose 6.8 percent, or 61 cents, to $9.64 on Nasdaq early Monday afternoon. The Los Gatos, California-based company is in the midst of a marketing drive to protect its dominant market share in the face of competition. Its larger rival Blockbuster Inc. BBI entered the market in August, while Amazon.com Inc. AMZN launched its service in the United Kingdom in December. Netflix Chief Executive Reed Hastings said late last year the marketing strategy was aimed at countering a potential bid by Amazon in the U.S. market. Netflix, which offered the first online subscriber rental service in 1999, reached one million subscribers in February 2003 and surpassed 2 million in May 2004. Blockbuster reported 750,000 U.S. online subscribers earlier this month. ((Reporting by Gina Keating, editing by Richard Chang; Reuters Messaging: gina.keating.reuters.com@reuters.net; 1 213 380 2014))

Thursday, March 24, 2005

"How InfoSpace Took Investors for a Ride"

The Seattle Times has a series of in-depth articles on InfoSpace titled “How InfoSpace Took Investors For A Ride”. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/news/business/infospace/

Friday, March 18, 2005

Ousted InfoSpace Founder in Cohorts with InfoSpace

The Seattle Times is reporting that fired InfoSpace founder and ex-CEO Naveen Jain is reportedly working with his previous company. The article states that Jain’s new company Intelius provides background checks for InfoSpace. InfoSpace had sued Jain and alleged that he misappropriated InfoSpace’s technology after he was ousted from the company. Here is the article from the Seatle Times: InfoSpace has deal with fired founder's new firm By Sharon Pian Chan Seattle Times staff reporter After firing founder Naveen Jain, suing him and alleging he misappropriated InfoSpace's technology, InfoSpace is now doing business with Jain's new company, Intelius. The Internet companies, which sit across the street from each other in Bellevue, have signed a three-year exclusive contract. Jain, who founded InfoSpace in 1996 and Intelius in 2003, confirmed the deal Wednesday. But both he and an InfoSpace spokeswoman declined to discuss the value of the deal or how it will work. When someone requests a background search on InfoSpace.com, the person is connected to the Intelius Web site. The contract marks a new chapter in the hot-cold relationship Jain has had with InfoSpace. The board of directors fired him in 2002. InfoSpace has repeated over and over again that Jain is ancient history to the company, no longer part of InfoSpace. "There's been a line drawn and there's new stuff going on," Jim Voelker, the current chief executive, said last year. A Seattle Times investigation published earlier this week found that in 2000 Jain and other InfoSpace executives boosted the company's stock value with accounting tricks and dubious deals, concealing revenue shortfalls and making "lazy Susan" deals, in which company officials invested in other firms that, in turn, sent money back that InfoSpace could count as revenue. Between 1996 and 2000, Jain had turned the tiny startup, an online directory of e-mail addresses, into the Northwest's largest Internet company, eclipsing even Boeing's stock value. It then took a nose dive with the dot-com collapse. While Jain sold more than $400 million in InfoSpace stock, faithful investors lost billions of dollars. Voelker said the company has new managers and a new direction. In late 2002, InfoSpace's board of directors fired Jain as chief executive officer when he refused to hire Voelker to replace him. Right before he left, Jain sent an e-mail to the entire staff saying he was "disgusted" with the management and board. In the e-mail, Jain called Voelker "unqualified," writing that Voelker had been "out of a job for the last 2 years" and that "his last job was to take nextlink in to bankruptcy." (Voelker left Nextlink, now XO Communications, several years before it filed for bankruptcy.) In the e-mail, Jain also accused a director of insider trading. Three weeks later, Jain started Intelius with several other former InfoSpace employees. He called it a homeland-security and personal-safety company. The Web site sells personal background checks collected from public-records databases. Soon after Intelius was founded, InfoSpace sued Jain and another former InfoSpace employee in King County Superior Court, accusing them of violating contracts that barred them from competing against InfoSpace for two years after they left the company. InfoSpace accused Jain of boasting that he intended for Intelius to replace InfoSpace as an online White Pages service. Jain, in return, claimed that InfoSpace had tried to hack into Intelius' Web site to learn its business plans, and that it was "pounding" the Intelius server with repeated requests in order to crash Intelius' Web site. The judge ruled against shutting down Intelius, and the parties settled the case in December, along with other shareholder litigation. Sharon Pian Chan: 206-464-2958 or schan@seattletimes.com.

Online Casino 888.com Seeks Float in U.K

Reuters reported that online casino 888.com is considering a float in the U.K. at a valuation of $1.6B with CSFB as the banker. The U.K. is reportedly friendlier to online gambling whereas online gambling is strictly forbidden in the U.S.

Blue Nile Facing New Competition

Novori.com has officially launched its website after 8 months of development selling all kinds of diamond jewelry providing fresh competition to Blue Nile (NILE). No doubt there will be new entrants as more and more diamond sales move online but we are unsure what competitive advantage this company has over the more established pure online players such as Ice.com. Don't forget OverStock.

See this write-up about sales of diamonds online http://www.techuncovered.com/diamonds01.html

Monday, March 14, 2005

Top Chinese Online Search Firm, Baidu, Prepares for IPO

RED HERRING indicated in an article that Baidu, the leading online search engine in China is preparing for an IPO on the Nasdaq market this fall. The company has reportedly retained the services of Goldman Sachs and has entered a silent period. The article states that Baidu is seeking a $1B market cap but Goldman Sachs thinks the true valuation is much less. Who can blame management for seeking top dollar given the recent success of Google’s IPO. According to iResearch, Baidu has a 44.7% share of the online search space in China and Google has a 30.1% share. Yahoo! is also a major player in the market with its purchase of 3721.com. Together, the three firms account for 85% of online searches in China. Sohu.com also promises to become a major player in the market and has recently updated its search services. Baidu is reportedly profitable (we will see when the filing comes out) and supposedly charges the equivalent of $0.04 cents per click on its paid search model which accounts for 70% of total revenues. The remaining 30% is split 15-20% for non-query-sensitive text links with enterprise search accounting for the balance. No doubt in my opinion that this IPO will ignite a frenzy when and if it is announced likely enticing other private Chinese Internet firms to IPO. Time will tell but many structural issues remain in the Chinese market that are currently making many of their equities unattractive at the moment following extreme investor interest over the past years. Maybe Baidu can revive interest.

Sunday, March 13, 2005

Google CEO on AOL Partnership

At the Bear Stearns media conference, CEO Eric Schmidt stated that the AOL partnership was critical to the success of Google to date and they consider AOL an extremely valuable partner. Given those statements, the CEO just brought to light one of the biggest risks in Google’s business models given that AOL represents about 15% of the companies revenues and that AOL has been extremely active in building out its search verticals, without Google I might add. The decision for AOL would center on whether the present value of the 20 cents they would gain from building and operating their own search engine is greater than the cost of operating the search engine i.e. computing power and salaries to math and engineering PhDs.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

Blockbuster To Increase Spend on Onlne DVD Rentals

Blockbuster Inc. BBI, posted better-than-expected quarterly operating profit on Wednesday, and signaled it would pour more cash into an online DVD rental service aimed at battling Nexflix Inc. NFLX.

The top U.S. movie rental chain said declines in rental revenue eased in the fourth quarter as customers reacted favorably to its newly launched online service.

Blockbuster, which recently decided to scrap late fees, said its efforts to attract more customers put it on course to improve profitability and fend off competition from Netflix and other rivals.

The company's stock rose 8 percent on signs that its appears to now be reversing a slide in rental revenues at stores open at least a year.

Even so, Stacey Widlitz, an analyst at Fulcrum Global Partners, said the movie rental business continued to face pressure from retailers, like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. WMT, who are selling cut-price DVDs to prospective movie renters.

To fight that competition, the company said it would spend $120 million on incentives and other promotions to add more online renters this year, more than doubling spending from year-earlier levels.

"It's a fight to the death with Netflix," said Michael Pachter, a Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst, who has a "buy" rating on Blockbuster. Commenting on the results he said: "All the metrics are good."

Excluding special items, Blockbuster posted a profit of 7 cents per share for the fourth quarter, 3 cents better than the average estimate among analysts polled by Reuters Estimates. A year earlier, operating profit was 32 cents a share.

John Antioco, Blockbuster chief executive officer, said the company's recently launched online movie rental service had helped stabilize rental demand as more people signed up to use the service.

Blockbuster, he said, would spend $120 million, more than double what it spent last year, on incentives and other promotions to add more online renters this year.

"Based on the strong results we are seeing and the significant profit opportunities we believe await us, we're going to accelerate our subscriber acquisition investment in Blockbuster Online," he told analysts in a conference call.

The online service launched in mid-August to go head-to-head with online renting pioneer Netflix Inc. NFLX, and other copy-cat subscription services, including one from Wal-Mart.

According to Antioco, online users now number more than 750,000 subscribers, prompting the company to aim for more than 2 million subscribers by the end of the first quarter of 2006.

At noon, shares of Dallas-based Blockbuster were up 50 cents at $9.22 on the New York Stock Exchange, where they scored their biggest single-day percentage gain in 4 months.

Same-store rental revenue fell 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter, a much smaller decline than in the third quarter or the year-earlier fourth quarter, according to the company.

Commenting on its bid for Hollywood, it said it had extended its offers for Hollywood shares and notes through March 24 to allow authorities more time to vet the bid, competes with an already agreed merger deal between Hollywood and Movie Gallery Entertainment Corp. MOVI.

Antioco told Reuters in an interview that Blockbuster would be open to any reasonable resolution to get the deal cleared, but declined to say if that could include shedding stores that antitrust authorities found problematic. Blockbuster expected antitrust regulators to rule on its bid by March 21, he added.

On Friday, the regulators said they needed Blockbuster to provide more information about the bid. Quarterly revenue rose 6.3 percent, to $1.72 billion and rental revenue totaled $1.15 billion, little changed from a year ago.

(Additional reporting by Gina Keating)

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

GuruNet Latest AdSense Partner

GuruNet Corporation (AMEX: GRU), a leading provider of integrated online reference information, announced today that it has signed an agreement with Google Inc. to include Google's contextual AdSense advertising on its information pages, as well as the integration of Google search into its Answers.com product. "Our revenue stream is based on including advertising alongside the million topics in our library," explained Bob Rosenschein, CEO of GuruNet. "We are pleased to be working with the industry leader and leveraging their broad ad inventory and strong technology."

As a result of the agreement, when Answers.com's visitors require information beyond the site's selected reference content, Answers.com now offers a co-branded, integrated and monetized version of Google's search functionality, allowing users to remain in one place for more of their information needs.

About GuruNet

GuruNet Corporation (AMEX:GRU) operates a leading reference engine, www.answers.com. Founded in 1999 by Bob Rosenschein, GuruNet Corporation (www.gurunet.com) provides patented technology and software tools to access concise information on demand. For additional information, visit www.gurunet.com.

eBay's CFO Has Upbeat Tone at Conference

From Reuters - EBay Inc.'s EBAY Web marketplace business in China is off to a good start this year and the company's overall ability to generate healthy operating margins is "completely intact" despite big investments, eBay's chief financial officer said on Tuesday.

CFO Rajiv Dutta repeated the company's 2005 financial targets set in January and said eBay had 10 million registered users in China.

"(It's been a) strong start to 2005," he said at a Lehman Brothers conference in Half Moon Bay, California, south of San Francisco, which was monitored by Webcast.

San Jose, California-based eBay also said in January it would increase its 2005 investments in key areas, particularly China and its online payment service known as PayPal, from $200 million to $300 million, and would sacrifice some short-term earnings growth to bolster long-term growth strategy.

Of that amount, $100 million -- about 2 percent of eBay's expected global revenue -- is earmarked for China, which eBay expects to be one of its biggest markets in coming years with a population of more than 1 billion that continues to see purchasing power rise as the economy develops.

EBay, which has users of its online buying and selling service in about 150 countries, started making investments in China about 2 1/2 years ago, Dutta said.

Dutta said operating margins, a key measure of profitability, were holding up despite the big investments.

"There is no doubt in my mind that the margin generating capability of this business is completely intact," he said, adding eBay would continue to generate cash flow from its businesses.

Financial analysts who cover eBay have voiced concern over the company's continued ability to grow the online bazaar at a fast pace.

Dutta repeated the company's full-year 2005 outlook provided in January that called for revenue of $4.25 billion to $4.35 billion and earnings, excluding items, of $1.48 to $1.52 a share. An eBay spokesman later said there was nothing new to the company's financial outlook.

EBay's stock traded down about 60 cents, or 1.4 percent, at $41.29 on the Nasdaq in afternoon trading.

Dutta said eBay was positioned for long-term growth and would not be confined to the twists and turns of

quarter-to-quarter financial reporting.

"It's not about the year, not about the quarter ... We have chosen the long term," he said.

eBay (EBAY) Launches Classifieds Web Sites

eBay (Nasdaq:EBAY), the World's Online Marketplace, today announced its launch of online classifieds Web sites in select international markets. Launched on February 28 under the brand Kijiji, the Web sites give people living and working in the same city a convenient, fun and free way to meet, share ideas, trade goods, and find information or things they want locally.

Kijiji is currently available in more than 50 cities in Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, and Japan. From building friendships and trading large appliances to chatting about the city's best restaurants or looking for a babysitter, Kijiji is designed to help people find what they need. Based on both personal connections and commerce, individuals can list and find items on Kijiji free of charge.

Kijiji is a start-up within eBay created by a small team of entrepreneurial employees. eBay endorsed the experiment late last year. Alex Kazim, senior vice president of new ventures at eBay, is responsible for the Kijiji initiative.

"Kijiji builds local communities online, giving neighbors a way to come together around local needs and interests," said Kazim. "We're excited about making Kijiji the online neighborhood meeting place for local residents in cities around the world."

The launch of Kijiji will not have a material impact on 2005 revenues and is incorporated in eBay's financial guidance as issued in connection with its fourth quarter earnings announcement on January 19, 2005.

Monday, March 07, 2005

Google Takes Wraps off Desktop Search

Google Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) today announced the formal launch of Google Desktop Search, a free downloadable application which enables users to search for information on their own computers. Previously in beta, today's 1.0 release adds search over the full text of PDFs and the meta-information stored with music, image and video files. Additional enhancements include support for the Firefox and Netscape browsers, Thunderbird and Netscape email clients and new Chinese and Korean language interfaces.

"Google Desktop Search brings the power of Google search to information on the computer hard drive," said Jonathan Rosenberg, vice president of Product Management at Google. "It's like having a photographic memory of everything you've seen with your computer, right at your fingertips. We're proud to take Google Desktop Search out of beta, and we will continue to extend the utility of desktop search for users worldwide."

In addition to searching a wide range of computer files and email, Google is the first desktop search tool to access the full text of web page history and the only one to search AOL instant messages. Google Desktop Search can also be used to recover accidentally deleted or misplaced information. For instance, a user who unintentionally deletes a Word document or PowerPoint presentation can use the tool to find the text stored in Google Desktop Search. All results are accompanied by cached snapshots of each web page and document so users can access information even if they're not connected to the web or if a document has been deleted.

Google Desktop Search will also provide application programming interfaces (APIs) that enable software developers to create new and innovative applications using the desktop search product. Plug-ins developed with these APIs will be made available for download at http://desktop.google.com/plugins, enabling users to search new content types such as Trillian chats and the full-text of scanned images, such as faxes. More information on the Desktop Search APIs can be found on the web at http://desktop.google.com/apis.

Additional enhancements to Google Desktop 1.0 include a free-standing search box that users can place anywhere on their desktop; making access to desktop and web information faster and easier than before. In addition to enabling users to block HTTPS web pages, Google Desktop Search now also excludes all password-protected documents from Microsoft Word and Excel.

Google Desktop Search is available at http://desktop.google.com. It is currently available for Windows XP and Windows 2000 Service Pack 3 and above. It requires 500MB of disk space, a minimum of 128MB of RAM, and a 400MHz (or faster) Pentium processor is recommended.

Kanoodle Releases Local Target

Privately held Kanoodle said on Monday it released LocalTarget, a Web search advertising product that targets ads to city-specific or local content pages.

The move comes amid massive investments in the local search market by Web search companies like market leader Google Inc. GOOG and its rival Yahoo Inc. <>

Local search tools aim to help Web searchers find information about nearby businesses, both large and small. Local advertising tools aim to help business owners attract potential customers.

"The majority of buying and selling happens locally. As a result, both national and local businesses spend close to $100 million annually trying to reach consumers in specific markets," said Greg Sterling, an analyst at The Kelsey Group.

((Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Editing by David Gregorio; Reuters Messaging: lisa.baertlein.reuters.com@reuters.net; +1 415-677-2549))

UBS upgrades Yahoo & Google

UBS upgrades Yahoo (YHOO) to buy from neutral with a $41 target, citing valuation made more attractive by "unfounded" search pricing concerns, solid fundamentals, and near-term catalysts. The broker expects YHOO to aggressively expand its Content Match product to compete with Google's (GOOG) AdSense, sees continued strength in branded advertising, expects new distribution and content partnerships, and a ramp in international growth. UBS also upgrades GOOG to neutral from sell on growth in Google.com sites and slower than expected hiring and capex. It says Google.com strength trumps other concerns and shares are fairly valued. UBS has a $190 target.

Saturday, March 05, 2005

BofA Supports Yahoo

Banc of America backs its buy rating on Yahoo (YHOO) and says concerns surrounding the 1Q pricing environment are overblown. "Our recent conversations with online advertising buyers coupled with comments from the recent Search Engine Strategies conference in New York reinforce our view that the online ad market, particularly within sponsored search, remains robust," BofA says. YHOO up 2.4% to $33.12. (JHS)

Friday, March 04, 2005

Analyst Says Yahoo to Build/Buy Blog

Internet media company Yahoo Inc. YHOO is likely to build and buy tools that help its users create, publish and search blogs, Susquehanna Financial Group Marianne Wolk said in a note on Friday.

Wolk also said she also expects the company to expand into social networking software, which lets users share and organize content.

Yahoo recently integrated RSS feeds into its MyYahoo home page. RSS, or really simple syndication, allows users to receive content from sources such as news organizations and Web blogs. It also is a way for Web publishers to syndicate their content.

"We believe Yahoo is likely to continue to invest in the blogosphere; we see Yahoo building and buying blog tools and RSS search capabilities to complement MyYahoo's

readership/aggregation service," Wolk wrote in her note.

Wolk added that she expects a potential new advertising market to grow around blog content.

A Yahoo spokeswoman declined to comment.

Google Inc. GOOG, Microsoft Corp. MSFT Web unit MSN, Time Warner Inc.'s TWX AOL and Ask Jeeves Inc. ASKJ each have invested in blogging tools.

Ask Jeeves acquired search capabilities through its Bloglines acquisition in February.

((Reporting by Lisa Baertlein; Editing by Jan Paschal;

Reuters Messaging:

rm:// lisa.baertlein.reuters.com@reuters.net;

E-mail: lisa.baertlein@reuters.com; Tel: +1 415 677 2549))

eBay Accused of Wrongfully Cancelling Options

From Dow Jones--EBay Inc. (EBAY) is being accused in a lawsuit of wrongfully canceling the stock options for employees of its former Butterfields Auctioneers Corp. unit.

EBay, which sold the Butterfields unit in July 2002, was not immediately available to comment on the class-action suit.

In a press release Thursday, the law firms involved in the case said eight plaintiffs filed the suit in San Francisco Superior Court on behalf of all Butterfields employees whose options were canceled, a group of more than 100 people.

The plaintiffs are also alleging that EBay accelerated the final date Butterfields' employees could exercise their stock options.

The plaintiffs are seeking relief, an injunction allowing plaintiffs to continue vesting in the stock options, punitive and other damages and attorneys' fees and costs.

According to the lawsuit, EBay's stock option contracts don't contain a provision allowing EBay to cancel previously granted stock options upon the sale of a unit. The plaintiffs allege EBay knew as early as December 2001 that it was going to sell Butterfields, but continued to grant new stock options to employees, trying to entice them to join Butterfields or stay at the unit.

Shares of EBay were trading down 2%, or 86 cents, at $41.21, in composite activity Thursday afternoon.

The plaintiffs are represented by the law firms of Goldstein Demchak Baller Borgen & Dardarian, Ackermann & Tilajef and Yablonski, Both & Edelman.

-Geoffrey Rogow; Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5400; AskNewswires@dowjones.com

Thursday, March 03, 2005

Become.com Launches

The founders of product search engine MySimon launched Become.com in beta hopping to attract users with reviews, ratings, and price comparisons. The founders of MySimon,Michael Yang and Yeogirl Yun, sold MySimon to CNET in 1998 for $700M.

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

Lycos Selects Ask Jeeves for Search

Ask Jeeves(R), Inc. (Nasdaq: ASKJ) and Lycos, Inc., today announced that Lycos has selected Ask Jeeves' algorithmic search technology to power search on Lycos.com. Effective immediately, the syndication agreement will bring Ask Jeeves search to millions of Lycos users.

"The Lycos brand is known for search and we're committed to re-establishing Lycos.com as a leading search site," said Adam Soroca, general manager of search services at Lycos, Inc. "Ask Jeeves' Teoma search technology will deliver outstanding results to users of our new search-centric experience at Lycos.com."

Ask Jeeves, Inc. also syndicates its search technologies and advertising products to other leading websites, including, InfoSpace, BellSouth, Mamma.com and CNET Networks.

"Lycos is a great addition to the list of sites powered by Ask Jeeves, and we look forward to bringing our differentiated search technology to millions of Lycos users each month," said Jim Lanzone, senior vice president of search properties at Ask Jeeves.

ValueClick Search division has released a free XML-based system

ValueClick, Inc. (NASDAQ:VCLK) today announced that its ValueClick Search division has released a free XML-based system that enables clients to use automated bid management platforms to manage pay-per-click campaigns on Search123 (http://www.search123.com) and Simpli (http://www.simpli.com).

The Client Optimization Agent (COA) enables advertisers and their agencies to access campaign management features on Search123 and Simpli using proprietary or third-party bid management platforms that optimize paid search campaigns. The real-time system, available without charge, enables clients to access their performance metrics and manage their titles and descriptions, tracking URLs and keywords through a back-end interface.

Built on ValueClick's core network infrastructure, the COA system is customizable for each client's specific data requirements and is highly scalable to meet the needs of even the largest keyword search campaigns. In addition to the technology, ValueClick Search has a team of account managers dedicated to providing clients with assistance in the configuration and ongoing use of their COA accounts.

"We are pleased to provide both the technology and the service to support clients seeking to automatically manage their Search123 and Simpli keyword campaigns," said James Beriker, general manager of ValueClick Search. "The COA is the first in a series of new tools and enhancements designed to significantly improve our clients' management of their keyword campaigns within their return-on-investment and other key performance metrics."

The announcement of the COA follows yesterday's announcement of the re-branding of ValueClick's paid search business as ValueClick Search, and the introduction of Simpli.

Netflix (NFLX) is prepared to sacrifice profits

From Reuters - Online DVD rental leader Netflix Inc. NFLX is prepared to sacrifice profits for as long as five years in order to win up to 20 million U.S. Subscribers and fend off major rivals such as Blockbuster BBI and Amazon.com AMZN, its CEO said.

Chief Executive Reed Hastings said Netflix, the pioneer of online DVD rental, could capture as much as 20 percent of the U.S. market by extending the strategy it embarked on in October to run at breakeven while spending heavily on marketing.

"Correct," Hastings said when asked if he was prepared to sacrifice profitability for as much as five years in order to reach 20 million customers, up from 2.6 million currently. "That's true. We haven't given any guidance on it so therefore it's possible," he said.

Hastings was speaking to a roomful of reporters at the Reuters Technology Summit in San Francisco.