From the New York Times comes a report that Microsoft is negotiating to buy Claria:
For the last two weeks, Microsoft has been in talks to buy a private Silicon Valley company, a move that underscores just how eager Microsoft is to catch up with Google, the search and advertising giant.
The company that Microsoft has pursued is controversial: Claria, an adware marketer formerly called Gator, and best known for its pop-up ads and software that tracks people visiting Web sites. The Gator adware has frequently been denounced by privacy advocates for its intrusiveness.
The offer price on the table as recently as yesterday was $500 million, according to people who have been briefed on the talks. But a person close to Microsoft said last night that the negotiations were on the verge of breaking off.
One person briefed on the deal said there was opposition within Microsoft to the acquisition.
Yikes. If you want to read more about this company, go to the Gator Information Center, run by my friends at PC Pitstop:
PC Pitstop believes that Gator products can degrade the quality of a user’s PC experience, and the applications themselves are not a good value. This belief is based on our hands-on use of Gator products, surveys of users that have Gator on their systems, and visitor feedback from our forums. Most Gator “users” are not aware of what Gator is doing on their PC behind the scenes, and even many advertisers are not aware their ads are being shown by Gator’s ad network through third-party contracts or Gator’s connection with Overture.
What is Microsoft thinking? This deal would be a P.R. disaster. The only way it makes sense is if Microsoft buys the company, fires everyone involved with it, has their buildings exorcised, and rewrites every line of code in their product.
Update: The deal’s dead. But it was still a stupid idea. Really, really stupid.
If I didn’t know any better I’d think it were April Fools Day.
Yelp! I use UNIX every day at work and absolutely DESPISE it, but if this deal really goes through, I’ll have to seriously consider wiping Winders and installing linux on My home computer.
It HAS to be latter, right? I can’t imagine Microsoft wanting this criminal corporation except to dissolve it once and for all.
I just did a search for “gator” in Google. This is hit number one:
“PC Hell: Gator Removal Instructions”
Microsoft to buy them? Please tell me it’s a joke!
if gator is so hard to remove, this would make it just what the folks in redmond would want. then their crappy products would be on your computer forever.
The idea of Microsoft using some of it’s monopoly money to “buys the company, fires everyone involved with it, has their buildings exorcised, and rewrites every line of code in their product” sounds great!
Ed’s part solution…
“…..has their buildings exorcised”
Maybe ….but evil electon activity is possibly the real devil rather than evil spirits…
We need to coin a new word to fit the cleansing
of places of electronic evil.
jp