How will Microsoft and Yahoo look next year?

commentary By now, the regulatory, cultural, practical and financial problems in Microsoft's Yahoo acquisition have been well aired. Let's skip forward to 2009, when they've all been solved and Yahoo is now a Microsoft brand.

Microsoft is now by far the biggest destination on the net.

In search, it lags Google by miles. In page views, unique users and attention -- how advertisers measure the impact of a site on an audience -- it's way ahead, doing more than twice as well as second-placed MySpace. In display advertising, it is untouchable. It's now that Microsoft's strategy becomes clear.

Neither it nor Yahoo has been stellar in innovating online of late, and their combined force is showing no signs of changing that. But now, it doesn't have to.

Microsoft is now home to the largest community on the net. Moreover, it has the tools to deliver that community to anyone. In a simple extension to the online hosting service it has been offering via Live, it has set itself up as the ideal place for online companies to start and thrive.

Join us, it says, and we'll sort out the traffic. We'll sort out the hosting. We'll sort out the search-engine visibility, the advertising, the hundred things you'd have to worry about otherwise. You get on with building your bright new idea. Welcome to the family. It's Adwords and AdSense, but tied much more tightly to a managed community.

For anyone who's had to set up an online presence with commercial pretensions, such an offer is irresistible.

In effect, Microsoft has a critical mass of online users and the technologies to manage them as consumers and creators. You don't have to worry about the rest of the net, although of course they'll come along too when you start to succeed. There's enough here. All you have to do is join.

Microsoft might not have native Web-savvy but it knows how to extract profit from a dominant position. By creating a community of new businesses, reliant on Microsoft's traffic driving, technologies and services, it can only strengthen its audience of users, creating new dependencies and reinvigorating the lock-in model it knows and loves so well.

There are obvious risks for Microsoft should it fail, but there are wider risks for everyone else if it succeeds.

The idea of Microsoft having the same domination of Web traffic as it has enjoyed on the desktop is a dystopian vision that is frighteningly easy to conjure up. However, regulators in Europe and the US have learned that it's harder to break a monopoly when it's formed than prevent one from arising in the first place. Open standards, open interfaces, open access must be a precondition for the merger.

Allowing Microsoft to monopolise a market once is careless, twice is unforgivable.

Talkback

Add your opinion

In order to post a comment, you need to be registered. (Sign In or register below)

Post your comment

Terms of Service - As a ZDNet registrant, and by using this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understand our Privacy Policy.

ZDNet Australia Live

I guess but in both cases, dead body!

6 hours ago by Doubt on National Botnet Network coming: Earthwave

I think it's for the very reasons you mention in your first paragraph that there is no CBA. With the ideological differences and vested ...

6 hours ago by RealismBias on NBN cost-benefit analyses are so 2011

Good points; but how do you establish consensus about the terms of reference of a cost-benefit analysis? What is to be included? How far ...

7 hours ago by Gwyntaglaw on NBN cost-benefit analyses are so 2011

I live in a small country town & have done since 2002. When I got to this town it had no mobile phone & no broadband. The only reason w...

7 hours ago by fibretech on Regional review highlights NBN, mobile

Hi there, just became alert to your blog through Google, and found that it is really informative. I am going to watch out for brussels. I...

7 hours ago by Uttedsips on Fujitsu Stylistic ST5011

Like most things in life, the devil is in the details. If a cost benefit analysis included a societal element, I'm certain nobody on eit...

7 hours ago by RealismBias on NBN cost-benefit analyses are so 2011

The coalition has done nothing else but keep changing their view over the last 2 years. -first it was "there is nothing wrong with the ...

8 hours ago by djz on NBN cost-benefit analyses are so 2011

Use the force Luke... FFS

8 hours ago by Beta on Regional review highlights NBN, mobile

michael kors outlet http://www.michael-kors-discount.com/#5923

8 hours ago by michael kors bag on Best iPhone travel apps

Hey butterflyeffecs and lex, Sorry you're not fans of this piece. But you're dead right in that it is the thoughts and experience of a se...

8 hours ago by LHopewell on Android fragmentation steers Vic Health

teen cams
http://www.aloe-vera.cz handjob

8 hours ago by MyncWenry on Fusion-io ioDrive (80GB)

We have fashional replica bags designer .Replica luxury bags sale here are perfect compromise of quality and price. The replica handbags ...

8 hours ago by Machelle on Telecom NZ CEO Paul Reynolds to leave

It's not a question of whether anyone at HSU would know how to do this, but whether they would have connections with people who could. T...

8 hours ago by meski on CT, phone clone

Fred, I can tell you what the difference between FTTN and FTTH is. FTTH means we will be developing technology and services that we sell ...

9 hours ago by andye on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

You are 100% right – Abbott is a paragon of tenacity. Now if he could only try that hard to get Malcolm Turnbull's phone number, we co...

9 hours ago by braue on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

Very interesting to hear Ben and thanks for providing some real-world examples. I suspect the NBN has actually improved things for a grea...

9 hours ago by braue on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

Hi Geoff, my opening paragraph simply suggests that the leader of the opposition party would rightfully be turning to his communications ...

9 hours ago by braue on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

Very good point Richard – perhaps one of the most interesting things about this whole debate is how extensively it feeds the collective...

9 hours ago by braue on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

Yes. I also wonder how much of this intentional subterfuge is actually playing out as part of Turnbull's master plan. Given the rough ri...

10 hours ago by braue on NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?

Westpac Management runs STG IT since the take over and it is they Westpac who makes the decisions.

10 hours ago by jeff_syd on St George opts to keep 200 IT workers

This story has been voted 12000 times in the last 24 hours!

12 hours ago, Is Bill Gates a great leader?

This story has been voted 10 times in the last 24 hours!

2 days ago, CeBIT 2012 opens: photos

This story has been voted 15 times in the last 24 hours!

2 days ago, Lenovo ThinkPad 3G tablet (32GB)

Facebook Activity

Keep up with ZDNet Australia

ZDNet Events Calendar

ZDNet Events Calendar