Latest Web Technology News and Web Technologies November 5 2003, the latest breaking New York Web design news brought to you by,
Web Designs Now,Website Designs Now,New York Web Design Homepage,Web Design Services for New York, Connecticut, Long Island,New York Web Design Client Testimonials,Website Portfolio of New York Web Design, About this New York Web Design Firm,Contact this New York Web Design Firm

Lycos Sues Overture
Latest Web Technology & Web Design News, November 5, 2003

Orbitz Estimated IPO
E-centives for Net Dollars
Online Retail Sales Up 27%
Yahoo Buys Keyword Co.
Overture Ad-tracking
Google AdWords Complaints
Eolas Patent Re-examined
W3C Revises PNG Format
Web Ads Show Growth

Adobe's XML Strategy
Google Tests Deskbar
Cisco Eyes Rebound
Lycos Sues Overture
Ask Jeeves' Smart Search
Yahoo! Copies Google
Ask Jeeves' New CEO
Usability Helps Profitability
MSFT Hires Overture CTO

More Web Design News:
2011 Latest Web Technology News
2011 April
2011 March
2010 December
2009 April
2008 November
2008 October
2008 July
2008 June
2007 June
2007 May
2007 March
2006 November
2006 September
2006 August
2006 July
2006 June
2006 May
2006 April
2006 March
2006 February
2006 January
2005 December
2005 November
2005 October
2005 September
2005 August
2005 July
2005 June
2005 May
2005 April
2005 March
2005 February
2004 March
2004 February
2004 January
2003 December
2003 November
2003 October
2003 September
2003 August
2003 July
2003 June
2003 March - May



November 5, 2003

Web portal Lycos has filed a lawsuit against Overture Services on the grounds that the search provider violated the provisions of a commercial search contract between them when it agreed to be acquired by Yahoo!.
By Stefanie Olsen

Waltham, Massachusetts-based Lycos filed suit against Overture on October 16th in the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts. The suit charges that Overture, a provider of sponsored search results, willfully disregarded its contractual obligation to obtain consent from Lycos before it would share confidential information about its business with third parties. Pasadena, California-based Overture, now owned by Yahoo!, was also obliged to obtain consent before being acquired by any Lycos rival, according to the complaint.

"Yahoo! is a 'Lycos Competitor' as defined in the Agreement. Overture did not seek or obtain Lycos's consent prior to Overture's assignment of the agreement to Yahoo!... Overture's assignment absent Lycos's consent is breach of the agreement," according to the filing.

In addition, the complaint said that Overture owes Lycos in excess of $800,000 under the terms of the agreement.

Lycos is the latest Internet company to tussle with Overture over contractual agreements post its Yahoo! buyout. European Internet Service Provider T-Online switched its commercial search services to Google from partner Overture shortly after that company agreed to be bought by Yahoo!, citing a "change of ownership" clause in the agreement. But it was forced to backtrack after Overture took legal measures against it. The Internet Service Provider (ISP) was free to replace Overture with Google once the deal closed October 7th, and has since done so.

Lycos hired Overture in September 2001 to display sponsored, pay-per-click listings whenever people used its Web search tool. The deal was mutually beneficial: When people clicked on Overture's sponsored listings, it would pay Lycos a percentage of the listing fee it collected from advertisers.

But since Overture agreed to be bought by Yahoo! in July, Lycos has re-evaluated its options. On September 30th, the company agreed to partner with its chief rival Google for contextual advertising across its site, a new form of pay-per-click advertising that Overture has also begun offering.

That move came only days after Lycos received a letter from Overture that "without any explanation or reference to the relevant text of the agreement, Overture simply asserted that 'under the transaction (with Yahoo!)', there will be no assignment of the agreement," according to the complaint. That means that Overture, in its view, did not have to seek permission from Lycos for the merger.

Google has been beefing up its advertising offerings, adding a self-serve option in August, among other features. The company recently announced that it has signed 150,000 advertisers to its network.

A Lycos representative said the company does not discuss legal proceedings. Overture did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment.

Web Designs Now
Back to the Top


 © Copyright 2011, All rights reserved  |  Privacy Web Design Forums  |  Web Design News  |  Advertise  |  About Us  |  Contact Us  |  W3C HTML 
 Related Websites: New-York-WebDesign.com