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Microsoft to Pay $240 Million for Stake in Facebook

Nrbelex writes to mention The New York Times is reporting that Microsoft has beat out Google and Yahoo for a 1.6% stake in Facebook. The investment will cost Microsoft $240 million valuing the total site at somewhere around $15 billion. "The astronomical valuation for Facebook is primarily evidence that Microsoft executives believed they could not afford to lose out on the Facebook deal. Google appears to be building a dominant position in the race to serve advertisements online. Fearing it might lose control over the next generation of computer users, Microsoft has been attempting to match and in some cases block Google's plans, even if that effort is costly."

11 of 277 comments (clear)

  1. The next Big thing, again by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After hearing so much about mySpace I finally surfed it, set up a page and looked around. It's all rubbish. People ask to join your list of friends to spam you and the interface is clunky at best. I think such a site would be a good idea, but their implementation falls short of the mark by leagues.

    Along comes Facebook, cleaner interface, perhaps better ability to keep crap from showing up in comments or messages people send you. Hopefully if you are spammed there's an actual admin who gives them the boot, though it's quick and easy to join so an abuser will likely create accounts as needed for pest purposes. When rot sets in people will leave and go to the next big site, leaving mySpace and Facebook to host an ever shrinking group willing to put up with crap.

    Two hundred forty! Million! Dollars!? IIIIII'mmmmmm the CAAAAAT! Seriously this is great news for those who hold ownership in this site, they'll rake in a very considerable profit.

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    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:The next Big thing, again by moderatorrater · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I disagree with the summary saying that it shows the company is worth $15 billion, that's ridiculous. It's an exclusive advertising deal with a small share of the company thrown in for good measure. The real question is, how much of that $240 million is for the advertising and how much is for a share of the company? My guess is that the majority (75+ percent) is for the advertising.

      What I really think this shows is that Microsoft thinks Facebook, and not myspace, is going to be dominant soon and for a long time. Facebook has the better interface and the better look/feel, and their user base is exploding. However, I also agree with the parent in saying that people will soon be leaving facebook for greener pastures. If the dot-com boom and embarrassing posting on slashdot about being worthy a lot of money are any indication, the owners should start selling their sharesnow, getting some of the insane wealth in case they can't get it later.

    2. Re:The next Big thing, again by 2ms · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. People care much less about how clunky the interface is etc than they do about where their friends are. Right now everyone (of the generation that is using these sites ie college students and younger, primarily) and their pet duck is on Facebook and/or MySpace.

      These are social sites. They are useless without the people you socialize with being on them too. MySpace and Facebook, thus, have it very good for the future.

    3. Re:The next Big thing, again by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Facebook and MySpace are the 21st century equivalent of Geocities. How many billion dollars do you think they could sell Geocities for these days? Remember, Geocities used to be VERY popular with idiots setting up free websites, just like MySpace and Facebook today. Anyone that spends more than $1000 investing in these fly-by-night sites is a complete fool or is looking to cash in on the pyramid scheme.

  2. to translate by User+956 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fearing it might lose control over the next generation of computer users, Microsoft has been attempting to match and in some cases block Google's plans, even if that effort is costly.

    In other words, they didn't spend $240 million for 1.6% because Facebook is worth $15 billion. They paid $240 million because they're in the middle of a pissing match with Google.

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    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  3. MyFaceYouBook by Audent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry but this is ridiculous. MySpace was the last Next Big Thing and is losing users to FaceBook at a tremendous rate. Facebook will face the same fate and so will the next one and the next one and so on.

    In six months' time Facebook will be "worth" half that and in a year it'll be worth nothing.

    I like social media, I think it's highly useful and may very well change the face of the internet in the same way the web changed the face of traditional media like newspapers, but this is Dot Com Bubble 2.0 as far as I can see. Crazy prices for Crazy products. Good on them for making the $$$$ but seriously ... it's insane.

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    I am a leaf on the wind
  4. I cannot hold myself by KeepQuiet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "total site at somewhere around $15 billion."

    WTF!?! Facebook is worth of 15 billion dollars? I thought paying more than a billion for Youtube was dumb.

  5. And Adobe... by beakerMeep · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Some have speculated that this could be a move to drive adoption of the Silverlight plugin to compete with Adobe's flash. There is evidence that could work too. When MySpace was hacked that involved some clever javascript and a SWF, the admins pushed Flash Player 9 (which had added security) on the userbase and it's adoption rate, many have speculated, is largely due to that. One of Microsoft's biggest challenges with unseating Adobe's Flash is it's insanely high adoption. (something like 95% of computers have flash 8) and now they just bought into a userbase of 20 million "early adopters." Will it be effective? who knows. But I would be surprised if we didn't start seeing Silverlight widgets and ads on facebook.

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    meep
  6. Re:good thing many people have the sites sourcecod by Dionysus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it was hacked recently and many people are making clones from the exact source Isn't having the source pretty irrelevant? Isn't the community, as in the people using the site, that matter? You could create an exact same site using the same code, call it, Friendster, and if nobody shows up, does it matter?
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    Je ne parle pas francais.
  7. Re:What's 1.6% of nothing? by oenone.ablaze · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a senior at a major university, I've been using facebook since '04, and I have to say that it's been a pretty important part of the lives of 95% of the students here and at other major universities for a long time. It's been great for keeping in contact with classmates from high school and in other schools. Since we (college students) developed have seen facebook grow and mature for a few years, it's come as sort of a shock to me that there's a debate about facebook's viability at all. I can't speak to facebook's staying power among the general public. In fact, though I use the site at least a few times per week, I only recently became aware that it was open to the general public. I can say, though, that it's played a fairly important part of our college lives. I've always just assumed that everyone would keep their accounts in order to help stay in contact with the numerous friends and acquaintances we've made over the past few years. For us (the majority of those pursuing undergraduate education in the US), it's definitely not a "fad."

  8. Re:good thing many people have the sites sourcecod by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The real difference between Myspace and facebook. Myspace is already owned by a large mass media company, absolutely no space for a buy in by either google or M$ and of course facebook is basically up for sale to the highest bidder.

    The problem with both of these sites in terms of future value, they are simply just a small microcosm of the overall world wide web, doomed to a limited existence. Cheap web serving appliances and IPv6 will be the death of both myspace and facebook.

    M$ making the typical Ballmer blunder by buying into a section of the web at inflated prices as it's demise is on the horizon, well, at least to those who have at least some understanding of the changing nature of the internet, as hardware reduces in price, software becomes free and broadband bandwidth grows.

    For either google or M$ to buy into facebook is an addmission of their own incompetence in managing their web portals and being unable to create their own desirable virtual community or in the case of both of those companies, to so mismanage their existing virtual communities, that they to lose to relative new comers.

    You only buy competitors when you can't compete. As for web advertising dominance, expect a come from behind, old world mass media, fracturing of that business space. They have a depth of expertise, as well as extensive libraries of content. Admittedly slow to the party, which sees them currently behind, but they will leverage their existing media distribution systems to push out and marginalize what is basically just a 'search engine'(google) and an 'OS/office suite'(M$).

    Did no one pay attention to how Newscorp sutlely promoted myspace by inserting references to it in their news papers, television shows, cable network and movies (the most interesting targeted ones were references to myspace in Sunday paper cartoons). As well as of course the expected advertising as news articles.

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    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen