US$8m advertising patent victory for Yahoo

By Elinor Mills, Special to ZDNet
18 August 2005 07:52 AM
Tags: yahoo, google, patent, miva, settle, jeeve, lawsuit, pay
Online marketer Miva has agreed to pay Yahoo US$8 million and ongoing royalties to settle a patent infringement lawsuit over pay-per-click technology used in search result ads.

Neither Yahoo nor Miva, acquired by FindWhat.com in 2003, disclosed terms of the royalty payments that are part of the settlement, announced on Monday in Miva's quarterly financial report. The agreement ends a three-year legal battle between the two companies.

"We are pleased to have this behind us and eager to move forward," Craig Pisaris-Henderson, chief executive of Miva, said in a statement.

Google agreed to settle a similar lawsuit a year ago. The search giant agreed to license Yahoo pay-per-click technology, as well as give Yahoo 2.7 million shares of its common stock to settle the patent infringement lawsuit and another dispute related to Yahoo's right to buy shares in Google.

"This patent has now been battle-tested in two litigations, both of which resulted in other companies deciding it was in their best interest to take a licence of these patents," Joseph Siino, vice-president of intellectual property at Yahoo, said in an interview.

Lycos and several online marketers also have agreed to license patents for the technology, without any lawsuits being filed in those cases, he said. "We're seeing a real upsurge in companies coming to us to talk about taking licences," Siino added.

Ask Jeeves, recently acquired by InterActiveCorp, said earlier this month that it would let advertisers bid for ad placement on its search results, like Yahoo and Google do.

An Ask Jeeves spokesman said: "We do not believe we are in violation of those patents with our recently introduced PPC search advertising product."

Meanwhile, sources have said Microsoft is in discussions to buy adware maker Claria in a move to own an advertising network to compete with MSN rivals Google and Yahoo. A Microsoft spokeswoman declined to comment.

Siino declined to comment specifically on search ad-related actions or plans by Ask Jeeves or MSN, except to say, "We are interested in and happy to discuss licensing opportunities for anyone who plans to use these innovations."

Under the pay-per-click system, advertisers bid for top placement in search results related to specific keywords and pay only when Web surfers click on their text ads. Yahoo acquired the technology when it bought Overture Services in 2003.

Paid search, criticised as a business model when Overture first launched it in 1998, has since become a lucrative practice for search providers, and represents the lion's share of revenue for search leader Google.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Suzanne Tindal IT: Govt's cost-cutting bitch
    The government needs to stop looking at IT as a necessary evil or the place to remove costs when the Treasurer comes calling.
  • Array Can complaints on mobile content be cut?
    On 1 July this year the new Mobile Premium Services Code was introduced. It sounds like it's had a good impact, but is it enough?
  • Array NZ farmers: Bleating about broadband
    As we know, farmers are such bleaters. They bleat as much as the four-legged woolly things in their paddocks. If it's not the weather, it's the strength of the dollar! Nothing is ever right. Likewise with rural broadband.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured