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Microsoft and Yahoo: First the Mighty Fall, Then They Make Fools of Themselves

clock July 17, 2008 21:48 by author Tom

Sorry for the multiple posts today but I couldn't help but make a brief comment on this.  According to Search Engine Journal, Yahoo says...

we will sell the entire Company to Microsoft for $33 per share or more if Microsoft will negotiate a transaction that delivers certainty of value and certainty of closing.

First, let me say I doubt this is what they told Microsoft originally because Microsoft originally offered $31 a share and I can't see a deal this big collapsing for $2 a share.

That said, $31 was astronomical AT THE TIME!  Before Yahoo lost the great majority of their talent, before hundreds of executives jumped ship, before Yahoo's management instituted several technological and business related poison pills to prevent said merger.  NOW they want $33 a share?!?!?

Its a more than 48% premium on a stock price that's still being inflated by the possibility of a  merger with Microsoft.  It's a more than 73% premium on Yahoo's stock price right before the merger was offered. 

Get Real!

(For the record, a lot of sources apparently reported this before SEJ and usually I try to link to the first source.  But SEJ put the meat of the letter in their headline which is what caught my eye on Techmeme and which is why I linked to them)



Being Simple Minded

clock July 17, 2008 15:34 by author Tom

Occasionally someone writes something so stupid that I honestly am tempted to buy a plane ticket to where ever they live just to have the pleasure of slapping them in the back of the head.

Such is the case with Chris Brogan's post on the whole Loren Feldman controversy (which I'm not going to rehash).  In his post he says...

That I’m not so sure about, and further, when you think about how one might patrol for such, I think free speech (not hate speech, but the other stuff that will get sucked into the nets) might get caught up, too.

* Pardon me as I take a deep breath before typing the rest of this post *

OK, here's the thing.  The people who protested Loren Feldman, the people who called him a racist, WOULD CATEGORIZE HIS VIDEO AS HATE SPEECH YOU DUM...

ok...one more moment...

Evaluating issues of morality (and legality as well though they are different things) requires you see things from outside your own limited perspective.  It means realizing that what you think defines something might not be what other people define it as. 

That's the point.

The reason the founders of our country (he's also American) didn't say something like "Free Speech unless its Hate Speech" is because they were wise enough to realize you can't do that without completely obliterating Free Speech.  Because everyone has a different definition of what speech is good and what speech is bad.

I tried desperately to keep my response civil but this type of thing is more dangerous than any racist could ever be.  People dismiss racists while the well intentioned can spout simple minded pronouncements to their heart's content.  Mark my words, if the world does end up heading towards the hell of a totalitarian society every brick on that road will be paved not by racists or other bad people but by well intentioned idiots who couldn't see beyond their own narrow frame of reference. 



I know you said Naked Conversations, but this is ridiculous

clock July 17, 2008 15:32 by author Tom

A couple of days ago I (grudgingly) brought up the Playboy Hottest Blogger contest to spotlight one of the bloggers who I thought was talented and largely unrecognized (Brigitte Dale just to give her that much more promotion). 

Well apparently, not all the bloggers are happy with the attention...

So it turns out that at least a couple of the women bloggers featured in a recent Playboy article that asked “Who’s the web’s hottest bloggers? Vote now and we’ll ask her to pose for Playboy.com!” aren’t very happy about the feedback they’re getting. In particular, they aren’t happy that Playboy says they’ll invite the winner to pose nude for the magazine, or that they are being compared to the other bloggers via a poll to determine who’s most attractive.

Now, the important thing to remember here is that the bloggers were contacted by Playboy and asked if they wanted to be part of the Playboy feature.  The only thing they weren't told was that (a) Playboy would ask the winner to pose nude and that (b) the article in question would be a poll. 

On the posing nude...I mean...its Playboy.  If you have some moral objection to women posing nude than you aren't going to want to be featured there in the first place.  I could understand if they insinuated the winner "had already agreed to" pose nude but all they've said is that they will "ask" the winner so that isn't the problem.

Much more likely, I think the issue is with ranking. 

That's the point I wanted to address here, or more accurately, the point...<dramatic pause>...behind the point.  The blog world is built on this idea of Transparency (popularly chronicled in a book by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel entitled Naked Conversations).  There's this idea that if we're all transparent than everyone will know everything and the world will rejoice in all the honesty.

But here's the thing, Transparency is a trick.  It doesn't work.  Not only doesn't it work it generally does more damage than anything else. 

That's where we get back to the Playboy thing.  People don't want to know how they rank against others.  Even if they say they do.    A 40 year old woman will often tell her husband she wants him to be able to "tell her anything" but I assure you she doesn't want to know he thinks his 20 year old secretary is more attractive than her.  Concealing things isn't always a bad thing.

Excessive transparency is built on this 1960s era idea that all things are concealed for a nefarious purpose but the truth is we conceal things to benefit others around us more often than not.  In fact, under the theory that most people aren't bad, concealing things usually benefits others more than it does the person doing the concealing because they have to bear the burden of whatever is being concealed alone. 

Surely its a judgement call on each person's part and some will choose to conceal things they shouldn't but that doesn't justify an all or nothing approach to transparency.

Anyway, there's nothing that can be done here.  Playboy certainly can't remove people mid-poll and the bloggers who have objected have no leg to stand on because they were informed in advance (they actually have less than no leg to stand on because they've already reaped the benefits of the click through traffic for about 2 weeks).  But its a lesson for anyone wanting to do such a poll in the future. 



About Me

Hi, I’m Tom and I run the IT department for a non-profit agency which provides treatment to special-needs children. Though I will (like any blogger) comment on technology in general my main goal is to detail how I’m trying to use technology to help treat the children we serve and its my hope that blogging will allow me to connect with people who can help in that goal.

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