With its $1.65 billion purchase of YouTube, Google takes the lead in Internet video--and could be taking on a host of copyright troubles.
news analysis Build off what they have, or buy a second-tier site? For Microsoft and Yahoo, there's no easy way to make the Internet video market a horse race.
October 10, 2006
YouTube will operate independently and the companies will work together on building new features.
October 9, 2006
commentary Yes, there are some very real copyright challenges. But this deal is a harbinger of the impending social-video Web.
October 10, 2006
Popular video-sharing site already faces legal heat. Will its acquisition make Google a high-profile lawsuit target?
October 9, 2006
perspective CNET News.com's Charles Cooper writes that Google's $1.65 billion deal for YouTube puts Mark Cuban in the position of soothsayer.
October 9, 2006
More often than not, big Internet acquisitions turn out to be disappointments, or at least a bit ahead of their time.
October 9, 2006
Some observers wonder if more deals will follow Google's acquisition of YouTube.
October 9, 2006
blog YouTube's co-founders and their informal, fuzzy-looking video about the Google takeover is ruling YouTube today--at least, traffic-wise.
October 10, 2006
blog Those intrepid mavens at Google clearly think, or hope, they can deal with one realm of uncertainty: What about copyrighted material?
October 9, 2006
Universal, Sony BMG and CBS have joined Warner in offering the legal use of their content for YouTube videos.
October 9, 2006
Forrester argues that while YouTube may have media companies' attention, one copyright lawsuit could undo it all.
October 2, 2006
The entertainment giant's Hollywood studio pays $65 million for Grouper, a lesser light than the boffo YouTube.
August 22, 2006





Keep up-to-date with the latest news stories on the Google/You Tube deal.
YouTubers to Google: Now what?
Associated Press
Google may shield YouTube from legal hassles
PCWorld
Google and YouTube: 10 questions left unanswered
eWeek's Google Watch
YouTube's new deep pockets
BusinessWeek
Google after YouTube: The beginning of the end?
CNNMoney.com
Investors digest GooTube deal
Red Herring
Plenty of fish in the online video sea
Forbes
Google-YouTube a blow to Yahoo
Red Herring
I mean take a look at who is the major owner of both Google & UTube. It is Sequioa capital. Can't you see the mind game that they are playing with people? On one hand Sequioa capital buys UTube shares for 5 Cents per share, same for what they paid for Google shares, OTOH they get Google to buy these shares off their hand for something like $100 per share ($1.6Bill valuation) and then they turn around dump the Google shares, which they have now hyped even higher due to this purchase, on the unsuspecting public who has no idea this shell game is going on, who has no idea that the main Google & UTube owners are the same Sequioa capital.
BTW, Sequioa also is/was major owner of Yahoo.
Cant you see the game they are playing!
One must give it to these people, they are damn smart. Or the masses damn blind
to not notice this game that the SiliconValley + WallStreet VC & Investment Banking mafia have
been playing at their expense for some time now.
--
Sequoia Capital
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sequoia Capital is a venture capital firm founded by Don
Valentine in 1972. The firm's partners include Don Valentine,
Pierre Lamond, Michael Moritz, Doug Leone, Roelof Botha, and
Mark Kvamme.
Sequoia provided venture capital for Google, Yahoo!, Paypal,
Electronic Arts, YouTube, Ometric, Insider Pages and was one of
the first investors in Cisco Systems, Oracle and Apple. Around
10% of the value of NASDAQ is made up of firms funded by
Sequoia
Look what we need is not search engines that are in 100s of different businesses today and getting into ever more tomorrow, as are the case with the Google & Yahoo search engine monopolies.
What we need is a pure search engine player who is ONLY AND ONLY in the search engine business, thus we are certain that it's results will not be biased to the 100s of different business interests that they have. And we can be safe from them unfairly promoting their business interest over our businesses. That is why I have been using Anoox search engine and urging all to switch
to Anoox. You can find them here in case:
www.anoox.com
Say "NO" to search engine media monopolies, that are little by little taking over the Web, well whatever lucrative good parts of the Web there are, and say "Yes..." to search engine freedom by switching to the Not-for-Profit and Open source Anoox search engine.
Lets take back the Web :)