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Google Creators Interviewed by Playboy

Cristiano wrote in to say that an interview with the creators of Google is appearing in the latest Playboy Magazine. That in and of itself is of little note, until one realizes that the issue of Playboy in question is already en route to subscribers and hits newsstands tomorrow, the same day that their IPO auction begins. News.com.com speculates that the SEC may be interested, since this could be a breach of the "quiet period" companies must endure before going public. It may also be nothing but a mistake in scheduling, but it has cast doubts on Google's IPO for some.

4 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. Methinks they don't want to go public. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    All the controversy just make more people hear about Google.

    It's been said before (by VCs in my last startup) that an IPO is three things:

    1. A funding event (which they don't need), and
    2. A PR event (which is always welcome)
    In the meeting they said that, I voluteered that it's also a liquidation event; but they suggested that that doesn't matter to anyone important.

    Google's IPO is a PR event more than anything; and if this adds controversy, that just makes for better PR.

  2. Interview from April by otisg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Note that this interview was done in April - before they filed for IPO.... maybe that makes it a little less difficult for them.

    --
    Simpy
  3. I'm not investing by antikarma · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Are they trying to commit corporate suicide? First they "may have" issued 23 million shares of stock to their own employees illegally and now they "may have" breached the quiet period. Do they even know what they're doing?

  4. Wall Street trying to torpedo Google IPO? by Suchetha · · Score: 4, Interesting

    submitted and rejected today:

    Business 2.0 is running a column that speculates that the negative publicity surrounding the Google IPO may be part of a Wall Street campaign to stop more companies from using the Dutch Auction system and bypassing the banks. It quotes such people as Patrick Byrne, CEO of Overstock.com , who relates what happened to them when they decided to follow the dutch auction method for their IPO.

    Suchetha

    --

    learn from yesterday, plan for tomorrow, party tonight
    or one out of three ain't bad