MSN Launches Pay-Per-Click Search Ads
San writes "ZDNet is reporting that MSN has launched its first paid-search advertising application. The system will first be launched in Singapore and will be followed by France in September and a pilot run in the United States in October."
This sound like a unpleasant invasion of privacy.h nology/2002210022_microsoftads17.html/news article from the Seattle Times,
According to http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstec
"AdCenter uses information from customers who registered for services such as Hotmail or who tailored the MSN home page to their interests. It supplements that with data purchased from the Experian credit bureau."
At first glance, this would appear to be a direct copy of Google's AdWords style keyword bidding on search result pages. However, whats more suspicious is how information on search users is being used to target the ads. If they choose to mine the profile data available to them through MSN passport (and this seems to be in line with their intentions, given that age and gender are already available to advertisers), Microsoft could try to exploit people's personal information to gain a targetting advantage over Google (at the expense of user's privacy..)
Business Voyeur
Windows 98... "Look Johnny, long filenames" (Macintosh had been there, done that)
M$IE7 Beta... "Look Johnny, Tabbed Browsers" (FireFox had been there, done that)
MSN AdCenter... "Look Johnny, Pay per click advertising" (Google had been there, done that)
What further amazes me is that anything M$ does is still news. Why are the masses constantly amazed by the fact that M$ does not have to form independent thoughts and simply hijack everyone elses. Why not take that black hole of thought hovering over Redmond and channel it into something useful.
A Secure Microsoft Product "Look Johnny, A Secure M$ Product...Make a Wish"
Google agreed to issue 2.7 million shares (~$250 million) of Class A common stock to Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, Calif. In turn, Yahoo dropped its lawsuit against Google and issued a "fully paid, perpetual license" to Overture patents.
I guess Microsoft thinks its open season on Yahoo! patents now... I hope Microsoft's legal team is ready to open the checkbook as I doubt the two Standford search engines (Yahoo and Google) will allow Microsoft to get in on the action for free!