Alt-Tab-A is the new name to be for Yahoo

PlanetJosh

Golden Member
May 6, 2013
1,815
143
106
Well that's how I'll remember what their new name will be minus the T.

http://arstechnica.com/business/201...-to-five-mayer-is-out-name-changed-to-altaba/

Geocities died, Yahoo Small Business got renamed to Aabaco as did Yahoo websites organization in general, and now this. Their e-mail is ok even good for me. It's fairly fast and easy to use and new messages like ones from your bank and other sites show up in it quickly. So I guess I'll hang onto Yahoo for email for the time being.
 

Crono

Lifer
Aug 8, 2001
23,720
1,501
136
Security for their email has been suspect for a long while. Kept hearing about people's email accounts getting compromised and used to send out spam and phishing attempts. I even know a few people personally who's accounts were compromised. The only thing I'm still using from Yahoo is Fantasy Football, and I probably won't even use that next season.
 

Carson Dyle

Diamond Member
Jul 2, 2012
8,174
524
126
That's not an Onion article?

WTF is the point of purchasing a brand name... and then changing the name? Gonna pick up a lot of subscribers in their 70s, I suppose. Is that a big advertising market?
 

FelixDeCat

Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
29,307
2,099
126
I still cant believe Yahoo bought Broadcast.com from Mark Cuban for $5,004,000,000 when the damn company only had a few million in revenue, a negative p/e ratio and was going to go broke if it was not bought out. Streaming unpaid copyright broadcasts over dial up internet - great business model!

https://www.cnet.com/news/yahoo-completes-broadcast-com-acquisition/

Yahoo shareholders got ripped off. Laughably Yahoo also touted its acquisition of Geocities (an early social media experiment).
 
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JasonCoder

Golden Member
Feb 23, 2005
1,893
1
81
It's called digital relevance panic. Walmart just did the same thing with its 3.3 billion purchase of Jet.com.
 

FelixDeCat

Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
29,307
2,099
126
http://www.halfbakedlunatic.com/post/The-Worst-Investment-Ever-Made.aspx

The CEO of Broadcast.com was not the founder of the company, and he was not a technology guy. In fact, he was completely clueless about the actual technology behind streaming video. But he had sold his first company, MicroSolutions (a fairly successful systems integration and software reseller) to CompuServe, and walked away with about $2 million in his pocket after taxes. It was enough to resurrect a dying company called Cameron Broadcast Systems, rename it (first to AudioNet, then to Broadcast.com), and set himself up as CEO.

Two years later, in 1999, Broadcast.com was acquired by Yahoo ... for $5.9 BILLION.

And who was the mysterious CEO of Broadcast.com?

His name is Mark Cuban – he became a household name when he used the profits from the sale of Broadcast.com to purchase the Dallas Mavericks basketball team (and a number of other high profile investments).

So how did a struggling company with a measly $13 million dollars in gross sales, who’s CEO would have been very happy with a $30 Million valuation two years before, suddenly become a six BILLION dollar company???

Part of it was due to the fact that it was the middle of the Dot Com bubble, and people just weren’t thinking right. Part of it was that Yahoo wanted to be in the “Media” business – whatever that meant – and they were eager to snatch up the only “Media Portal” before anyone else did.

But mostly, the Yahoo executives were amateurs and got bamboozled by a fast talking CEO who made all sorts of promises that he never delivered on. The Broadcast.com business unit immediately floundered under the incompetent Yahoo management, and today both the AudioNet and Broadcast.com web addresses unceremoniously forward to the homepage of Yahoo. It was a total bomb from day one.

At the absolute very most, Broadcast.com was worth maybe $50 to $100 million – and only then if it was paid out over five years, contingent on the management team meeting strict performance targets. After all, they had no technology of their own – they purchased everything that made their system work from companies like VXtreme. They had no profits, the $13 million in gross income barely paid their bills. What they had was a catchy domain name, a fairly good reputation, and a small handful of cash-paying customers.

Yahoo paid $5.9 billion dollars ... for a domain name ... which they did nothing with ... making Mark Cuban and his business partner Todd Wagner into instant billionaires ... without any accountability for the ongoing success of the business.

And THAT’S why I give it my vote for the worst investment ever made.
 
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Imp

Lifer
Feb 8, 2000
18,829
184
106
So that's how Mark Cuban made his money. Sounds similar to Kevin O'Leary's story...
 

Humpy

Diamond Member
Mar 3, 2011
4,463
596
126
I'm guessing they chose a phonetically weak brand name that will easily be forgotten and disassociated with the failure of Yahoo. Take a few years out of the public eye and see if they can rebuild whatever assets they have left into something that can later emerge as new and exciting.
 

PottedMeat

Lifer
Apr 17, 2002
12,365
475
126
they're talking a lot for a deal that hasn't closed yet.

i wonder what numbers verizon is tossing around now. 3 billion? 2 billion?
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2017/01/yahoo-not-dead-yet/
Given that Yahoo's management is not in a position to go look for a better offer—Yahoo would have to pay Verizon a $145 million "termination fee" to walk away from the table and find another suitor, and there isn't exactly a long line of people looking to make a better offer—it may end up having to settle for whatever Verizon decides on as a purchase price at this point or wait for Verizon to walk away from the deal. Verizon has already reportedly knocked $1 billion off its offer after the first security breach revelation. Given the most recent numbers from Yahoo's operations, that offer may drop further.
 

bruceb

Diamond Member
Aug 20, 2004
8,874
111
106
I am just curious to know if my @yahoo.com email will be dead or if everything, archives, contacts, etc will be moved the new system (if they go that way -- same for Yahoo Finance where I track my stocks) .. It would be a real pain to notify all the email newsletters of a change of email. Same for all the personal contacts.
 

Herr Kutz

Platinum Member
Jun 14, 2009
2,545
242
106
The most important question that needs to be answered is: what will happen to Yahoo answers?
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,425
8,388
126
The most important question that needs to be answered is: what will happen to Yahoo answers?
whatever it is, i'm sure the best answer will be something completely unrelated to the topic and a lot of racists will show up.
 
Reactions: Blackjack200

lupi

Lifer
Apr 8, 2001
32,539
260
126
Couple years ago I shifted all my emails to yahoo, if they change the name it's going to be a pain in the ass to go through everything and revise it.
 

poofyhairguy

Lifer
Nov 20, 2005
14,612
318
126
Walmart just did the same thing with its 3.3 billion purchase of Jet.com.

At least we got a piece of that action with all those wonderful Jet.com coupons that Jet.com used to build up an artificial userbase to dump on Wal-Mart.

Save $30 per transaction and screw over Wal-Mart? Sign me up every day for that one.
 

BudAshes

Lifer
Jul 20, 2003
13,920
3,203
146
Couple years ago I shifted all my emails to yahoo, if they change the name it's going to be a pain in the ass to go through everything and revise it.

Why would you shift all your emails to one of the least secure and worst email providers?
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
1,685
126
Verizon is buying Yahoo's core businesses including the brand for $4.5 billion. Outside of their core businesses, Yahoo has investments (mostly in Alibaba) worth $30 billion. So the Yahoo name and core businesses are sold to Verizon, and what's left is a corporation that holds investments in other businesses. Altababa is a corporate zombie that essentially does nothing but hold those assets. That's why the Altababa name means nothing.
 
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