Yahoo moving news site development team to Taiwan

September 8, 2009

Reuters

By Alexei Oreskovic

September 3, 2009

Yahoo Inc is moving the product development team for one of its key Web properties to Taiwan, the latest change within the Internet company as it moves to cut costs and revamp its online offering.

The product development and operations teams for the Yahoo News division will be based out of Taiwan, said Yahoo spokeswoman Kim Rubey. The types of jobs moving overseas include product management, engineering and user interface design, Rubey said.

The editorial staff for Yahoo News will remain in Santa Monica, California, where Yahoo’s content division is based.

Rubey would not say how many employees currently work in the groups that will be affected by the plan, but said the company does not expect any layoffs as a result of the move, which was first reported on the blog All Things Digital.

“We are not achieving any cost savings in doing this,” said Yahoo SVP of Media Products and Solutions Jeff Kinder in an interview with Reuters on Thursday, noting the affected U.S. employees will be reassigned to other projects.

Kinder said Yahoo previously had 26 separate news websites for different regions of the world, with disparate computer code bases and content management systems. That made rolling out new features a slow and inefficient process.

By building a single, global news product in Taiwan, Yahoo will be able to speed up innovation, he said.

“At the heart of this it’s about accelerating development for us,” Kinder said.

The team in Taiwan is made up of existing Yahoo employees who were previously responsible for the company’s regional news sites in Taiwan, South Korea and Hong Kong, said Kinder. The transition began six weeks ago and will last another few months.

News of the move comes a little more than a month after Yahoo announced it would outsource its Internet search technology to Microsoft Corp , in a 10-year deal that Yahoo said will save roughly $425 million in operating expenses.

Yahoo has been overhauling its organizational structure and its product offerings since Carol Bartz took the reins as CEO in January. The company unveiled a major redesign of its home page last month, and has also updated key products such as Yahoo Mail, while shutting down underperforming properties such as GeoCities.

In April, Yahoo said it would layoff five percent of its workforce, or roughly 675 employees.

Yahoo News is the top online news site in the United States, attracting 48 million unique visitors in July, according to comScore. The site is considered one of the key properties that Yahoo will focus on as it strives to revive its growth.


Yahoo to overhaul search before Microsoft deal

August 26, 2009

Associated Press

By Michael Liedtke

August 24, 2009

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_TEC_YAHOO_SEARCH?SITE=ORPOR&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Yahoo Inc. will keep innovating in search and try to outsmart both Microsoft Corp. and Google Inc. even as the slumping Internet company prepares to lean on rival Microsoft’s search technology.

That message emerged Monday as Yahoo previewed a series of search engine upgrades that it plans to introduce before the end of the year, just a few months before Microsoft is supposed to take over responsibility for powering most of Yahoo’s search results.

With Microsoft handling the heavy lifting, Yahoo will focus more on designing special touches aimed at making its search results more useful than its rivals, said Prabhakar Raghavan, Yahoo’s senior vice president of labs and search strategy.

“We are not going to be a version of Bing,” Raghavan said, referring to the brand of Microsoft’s search engine. “We are going to have our own Yahoo search experience.”

Toward that end, Yahoo plans to devote the left column of its search results to other popular Web services like Facebook, Twitter, Yelp and even Google’s YouTube. Click on any one of the icons there, and information from that service matching the search keywords will appear instead of the regular search results at the center of the page.

The feature will enable users to look at Facebook’s personal profiles, Twitter’s message updates, Yelp’s restaurant reviews and YouTube’s video clips without having to leave Yahoo.

By drilling deeper into destinations filled with personal information and images, Yahoo is betting its search engine will gain a reputation as the best place to research and discover things about people.

“Searching for people has been Google’s domain,” said Larry Cornett, Yahoo’s vice president of search products and design. “We are going to take that away from them.”

Yahoo will be pursuing its lofty ambitions in search with a smaller budgets and fewer engineers.

If it’s approved by antitrust regulators, the Microsoft partnership is supposed to reduce Yahoo’s spending on search by more than $500 million annually. Part of those savings will be achieved by transferring 400 of its 13,000 employees to Microsoft’s payroll. Yahoo also expects to lay off an unspecified number of workers.

The cutbacks has convinced some analysts that Yahoo eventually will phase out of search entirely — a notion that Cornett tried to dispel. “Yahoo will continue to innovate in search,” he said.

As it stands now, Google commands a nearly 65 percent share of the U.S. search market, with Yahoo at about 19 percent and Microsoft at nearly 9 percent, according to comScore Inc.

Yahoo’s plans to bring more of a social touch to its search page mirrors what the Sunnyvale-based company has been doing in other parts of its Web site.

Late last month, Yahoo front page underwent a makeover that embraced more applications and information from Web sites. And now its widely used e-mail service is ushering in more outside applications as part of long-awaited changes unveiled Monday.

Yahoo believes it can become the main place where people spend their time online by making it easier for its more than 500 million users to import information from elsewhere.

In the process, Yahoo hopes to recapture some of the buzz that it lost to rising stars like Facebook and Twitter while also luring back more advertisers. Yahoo’s ad revenue dropped 13 percent in the April-June period, the worst erosion since the dot-com bust at the start of the decade.

The question now whether it has taken Yahoo too long to become a more social animal. For instance, some of the improvements that are finally being blended into its e-mail service were first publicly discussed at a major electronics trade show in January 2008.

Yahoo shares gained 20 cents Monday to close at $14.99. The shares have shed 13 percent since the Microsoft alliance was announced, largely because investors don’t think Yahoo got enough in return for relinquishing so much of the control over its search page.


The Search For a Rival

August 26, 2009

Time

By Farhad Manjoo

August 31, 2009

Microsoft is spending massively on its new search business. Is Bing a better engine? Maybe. Can Google play defense? We may soon find out

Every year, the market-research firm Millward Brown conducts a survey to determine the economic worth of the world’s brands–in other words, to put a dollar value on the many corporate logos that dominate our lives. Lately the firm’s results have been stuck on repeat: Google has claimed the top spot for the past three years. The most recent report values Google’s brand–those six happy letters that herald so many of our jaunts down the Web’s rabbit hole–at more than $100 billion.

What’s astonishing about this stat is how effortlessly Google seems to have earned the public’s affection. Other companies–Microsoft, Coke, IBM, McDonald’s–spend enormous sums to stay in the consciousness. Google, which makes most of its money from ads, rarely advertises itself. Telling the world how well it does what it does just isn’t Google’s way.

But Google’s humility is being tested as never before. The firm’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., seem besieged by competitors gaining new momentum. Even nominal allies are questioning the company’s motives and long-term plans. In July, Google’s largest competitors, Microsoft and Yahoo!, agreed to work together in an attempt to dethrone it as the world’s dominant search engine. The deal, which awaits government approval, would create a first: a tenacious, well-financed search rival.

Conflicts are beginning to take place in other areas where Google has ventured. That includes e-mail and office programs (Gmail, Google Docs), a cell-phone operating system (Android) and a Web browser (Chrome). Google scans and sells books, runs a phone system and is even working on a desktop operating system to rival Windows. CEO Eric Schmidt recently stepped down from Apple’s board of directors because the two companies now compete in so many areas. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating a legal settlement between Google and the publishing industry over the company’s book-scanning service, and Christine Varney, Justice’s antitrust chief, said she sees Google as a “problem.”

At the moment, Google’s most pressing problem is Microsoft. The software giant is spending $100 million to market its new search engine, Bing–and in the process, to get us all bummed about Google. Bing’s slick ads are unavoidable and blistering. They suggest that Google is broken, that it rarely leads us to what we’re looking for and turns us all into blathering zombies who spew out search keywords in casual conversation.

Microsoft claims Bing isn’t even a search engine–it’s a “decision engine.” What that means isn’t exactly clear. Bing seems to work the same way Google does: type in some keywords, it gives you some Web results. But the marketing shows signs of gaining traction. According to the media-metrics firm comScore, Bing captured 8.9% of the search-engine queries in July, a tiny increase from 8.4% in June. “All of us in the search industry were surprised by Bing,” says Anna Patterson, a former Google engineer who has since gone on to found Cuil (pronounced Cool), one of the many smaller search start-ups in Google’s shadow. “It’s the first time you have someone with deep pockets that’s willing to lose money in order to compete with Google, and they’re willing to stick with it over the long term.”

Google says it isn’t worried, and publicly at least, the company is pretending not to notice Bing. The search engine is Google’s cash cow, and the firm constantly pours resources into improving it–hiring the industry’s brightest and most experienced engineers, paying them handsomely and letting them work on what is effectively the world’s largest data-mining project. Just this month, Google unveiled a project it calls Caffeine, a massive overhaul of its back-end infrastructure that promises to create a faster, more accurate and more comprehensive search engine. “We aren’t resting,” says Gabriel Stricker, a Google spokesman. “We’re continuing to innovate–i’m feeling lucky is getting luckier all the time.”

This sort of constant improvement pays off: two-thirds of all searches in the U.S. are now conducted through Google–about 7 billion a month. Yahoo! has less than 20% of the market, and Microsoft less than 10%. Despite Microsoft’s claims, most people think Google works pretty well as it is.

Microsoft argues that the Yahoo! deal will help change that perception. If the partnership is approved, Microsoft will take over Yahoo!’s search engine–type in “Britney Spears” at Yahoo! and you’ll get results provided by Bing. Microsoft points out that search engines get smarter as more people use them; if a search engine notices lots of clicks on Spears’ music videos after searching for the pop star, it can begin to highlight those videos in future searches. That’s how the Yahoo! deal will help Bing beat Google, Microsoft says. By massively expanding its market share to a potential 26%, Microsoft will get access to a much broader pool of user data, which will in turn make it better at predicting what you want when you search.

Google pooh-poohs this claim. Hal Varian, the company’s chief economist, has pointed out that most search engines look at only a small sample of their data in order to improve their results. In other words, Microsoft already has enough data to learn from its users. “It’s not the quantity or quality of the ingredients that make a difference. It’s the recipes,” Varian told CNET. The recipes are Google’s proprietary algorithms, which it has slaved over for more than a decade. They’re Google’s ultimate competitive advantage, and Google believes they’ll help it weather the coming assault.

Privately, Googlers will tell you that the Bing ads rankle. They describe them as misleading and unfair, painting a picture of Google that doesn’t match reality. Maybe, but Microsoft–a company not previously known for its marketing savvy–is taking a page out of a 1960s Procter & Gamble playbook: create a problem consumers don’t know they have, then solve it. Bing!

Can Google play defense if Bing starts to move the needle? Google’s first instinct has always been to innovate its way out of trouble. But there are a number of features in Google’s search engine that most of the public is unaware of. Like how it can give you the local weather and movie times and perform currency conversions with a single search query. It’s not in Google’s DNA to run confrontational ads, but it’s easy to imagine a campaign that shows off all the amazing things your friendly search giant can do.

 At the moment, Google derives about 97% of its revenue from advertising. Barry Schwartz, CEO of the Web consulting firm RustyBrick and an editor at Search Engine Land, says that some at Google have to be getting a little jittery that the company’s entire revenue stream rests on a single product. “They keep downplaying that they’re competing with other companies–whenever they pitch something like Android or their new Chrome OS, they say it’s just an attempt to get people to use the Web more,” Schwartz says. But here’s the irony: Google faces a problem very similar to the one plaguing Microsoft, which itself makes the bulk of its money from just two products–Windows and Office. Each company sees the other’s business as its own path forward. The rest of us, we’re just bystanders.


Interview-Microsoft legal chief sees risk in Yahoo deal

August 19, 2009

Reuters

By Bill Rigby

August 18, 2009

Microsoft Corp has confidently described its planned search advertising deal with Yahoo Inc as a “win-win”, but the software company’s legal chief is prepared to concede that the outcome is not certain.

The deal, struck in late July after months of talks, faces a tough regulatory review, and the possibility that it won’t be enough to effectively challenge Google Inc .

“For both companies, it would be right to say this is not risk-free,” said Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith, in an interview last week. “I don’t know of any investment that is.”

The deal, struck on July 30, proposes that Microsoft’s Bing becomes the search engine for both, while Yahoo focuses on attracting big advertisers.

Microsoft shareholders generally welcomed the deal, but Yahoo’s shares plunged as investors bemoaned the lack of an upfront payment from Microsoft or revenue guarantees in hard dollars.

Analysts pointed out that Microsoft still had an incentive to take market share from Yahoo, and that Yahoo’s salesforce could end up selling ads they would not be paid for if clicked on in a Microsoft site.

Smith acknowledged that such a situation was possible, but pushed attention to the potential upside.

“I do think there is a compelling business return that each company has a strong opportunity to generate for its shareholders,” he said.

LEGAL RISK

The first hurdle is the antitrust review, which Microsoft and Yahoo do not expect to be completed until early 2010. Microsoft has made its initial Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust filing with the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ), according to Smith. The DoJ is expected to lead the review, but has not yet commented on the matter publicly.

“It’s impossible to know for certain how long that review will take, obviously it’s up to the governments involved,” said Smith.

Microsoft is confident it can persuade regulators that a stronger rival for Google is in the best interests of the market.

“It’s widely understood by governments around the world that the search marketplace needs to become more competitive,” said Smith, whose job it is to steer Microsoft through the antitrust approval process.

“The only way to do that is to bring the No. 2 and 3 providers together and thereby create a stronger counterbalance to a very dominant No. 1.”

Antitrust experts generally expect the deal will get close scrutiny from regulators, but ultimately will be approved. [ID:nN29273592]

According to Microsoft’s own research, Google has 78 percent of the U.S. market for paid search — results pages featuring ad links, rather than just pure algorithmic results — compared with Yahoo’s 16 percent and Microsoft’s 6 percent.

Yahoo, which must also make antitrust filings, will make a similar case to regulators.

“We feel good about what advertisers and publishers and users are going to see here, which is really a long-term sustainable opportunity for some competition to Google, which has been quite dominant,” said Michael Callahan, Yahoo’s general counsel, in an interview last week.

Callahan says the Justice Department’s opposition to a planned search-ad partnership between Yahoo and Google last year — which ultimately led to the companies abandoning the plan — will have no bearing on the Microsoft deal. “These are not similar types of transactions,” he said.

SCALE BUSINESS

Microsoft, which vehemently opposed the Yahoo-Google tie-up last year, says the Justice Department was right to object to the deal.

“The most important thing is not what any single private company argued last year, it’s what the DoJ concluded,” said Smith. “And what the DoJ concluded last year was that Google already had a dominant position in this marketplace.”

Alone, Microsoft cannot effectively challenge Google, said Smith.

“We pointed out a year ago that despite our size and our financial resources, we did not have a profitable search business. Today we do not have a profitable search business.”

The Microsoft-Yahoo tie-up is an “important step” in building a viable search business, he added, as it helps them gain the scale necessary to play a significant role in the market.

“It’s like having an auction house,” said Smith. “If no one comes to your auction you don’t have the kind of business that causes people to want to sell products at your auction house. You need a certain scale to be competitive.”


Microsoft’s Bing wins share from Google, Yahoo

August 19, 2009

Reuters

August 18, 2009

Microsoft Corp’s Bing search engine continued to make small gains on rivals Google Inc and Yahoo Inc in the U.S. Internet search market in July, according to the latest data from research firm ComScore.

Microsoft, which launched Bing in early June, racked up 8.9 percent of U.S. Internet searches in July, up 0.5 percentage points from June.

Google, the leader in the market, and Yahoo, the distant No. 2, both lost 0.3 percentage points of market share in July, to 64.7 percent and 19.3 percent, respectively.

Late last month Microsoft and Yahoo finally signed an agreement to cooperate on Internet search advertising, with Bing powering searches on both companies’ sites and Yahoo handling the ad sales. [ID:nN29216653]

The deal has yet to be approved by regulators and likely won’t take full effect in the market until early 2012.


Microsoft’s Bing brings in more Internet search traffic as Google, Yahoo taper off

August 18, 2009

Associated Press

August 17, 2009

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_SEARCH_MARKET_SHARE?SITE=ORPOR&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Microsoft Corp.’s souped-up Internet search engine gained a little more ground on industry leaders Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. in July, according to data released late Monday.

Despite the progress, Microsoft’s search engine still remains a distant third in the United States — the main reason that the world’s largest software maker plans to team up with Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo next year.

By working together in online search, Microsoft and Yahoo are betting that they can pose a more serious threat to Google in the most lucrative part of the Internet advertising market.

Microsoft’s search engine — renamed Bing as part of a June overhaul — ended July with a 8.9 percent share in the United States, up from 8.4 percent in the previous month, according to comScore Inc. Just before Bing’s debut, Microsoft’s search market share stood at 8 percent.

Google retained a commanding U.S. lead at 64.7 percent through July, down from 65 percent in June, comScore said. Yahoo’s market share dipped to 19.3 percent in July from 19.6 percent in June.

Microsoft shares fell 44 cents, or 1.9 percent, to close Monday at $23.25. Google shares shed $15.11, or 3.3 percent, to finish at $444.89 while Yahoo shares closed at $14.56, down 48 cents, or 3.2 percent.

Bing attracted 29 million more search requests in July than it did in June, a 2.4 percent increase to 1.21 billion, comScore said.

The relatively modest gains haven’t come cheaply for Microsoft. The Redmond, Wash.-based company is spending $100 million to promote Bing, adding to the billions that it has already invested in a mostly fruitless pursuit of Google.

In its last two fiscal years, Microsoft’s online division lost a total of $3.5 billion. Meanwhile, Mountain View, Calif.-based Google has emerged as a bigger threat to Microsoft by mining ever bigger profits from its dominant search engine.

Google is on pace to sell more than $20 million in online ads for the second straight year, with most of the revenue coming from short marketing messages placed alongside search results. The recession, though, has been pinching Google, like most companies.

Total U.S. requests at Google declined by 352 million, or nearly 4 percent, from June to 8.78 billion in July, according to comScore. Yahoo’s month-to-month query volume dropped nearly 5 percent, or 130 million, to 2.63 billion requests in July.

It’s not unusual for search requests to taper off in the summer as more people go on vacation and spend time outside away from their computers.

Total search requests processed by the Internet’s five most popular search engines fell from 14.06 billion in June to 13.58 billion in July. The July volume was 15.5 percent higher than at the same time last year.

InterActiveCorp’s Ask.com remained the fourth-largest U.S. search engine with a 3.9 percent in July, unchanged from June. AOL, which is supposed to be spun off from Time Warner Inc. later this year, held a 3.1 percent U.S. share, also unchanged from July.


Microsoft: take that, Google

August 7, 2009

BusinessWeek

Microsoft: take that, Google

By Peter Burrows

August 10, 2009

So Microsoft got its wish. Thanks to a long-awaited deal with Yahoo!, the software giant is poised to become the clear No. 2 in the most lucrative Internet market of them all: search. Under the agreement, Yahoo will use Microsoft technology to respond to searches made on Yahoo sites and to serve up the ads that appear alongside the results. If the deal is cleared by antitrust regulators, which is no sure thing, Microsoft will triple its search market share to nearly 30% and become the only meaningful alternative to Google, which holds 65% of the market.

The deal casts Microsoft in an unfamiliar role. The software maker that drew fire for years for its allegedly anticompetitive behavior now must prove itself an effective force for competion against Google. Advertisers and online publishers want a viable alternative to the search titan. But analysts question whether Microsoft can avoid losing ground as it implements the complex Yahoo partnership, which could take two years, and afterward come up with real innovations in the business. “We can’t afford a hiccup on this,” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said in an interview.

There is cause for optimism. Microsoft’s Bing, the search engine it launched two months ago, is a hit, having begun to gain market share. And by combining Bing’s search with Yahoo’s, Microsoft will get more data about Web surfers’ behavior to refine its technology.

A MUCH LARGER AUDIENCE

Just as important as answering Web surfers’ queries is delivering the ads that appear next to them. That, after all, is where Microsoft will make its money. Although the company’s adCenter technology works reasonably well, many advertisers haven’t bothered to use it, because it couldn’t deliver as many eyeballs as Google could. Since all ads on Yahoo sites now will run though adCenter, advertisers using the system will be able to reach a much larger audience than in the past. “If you’re an advertiser, you’re going to be able to triple your reach overnight,” says Robert Murray, chief executive of digital ad agency iProspect.

Advertisers are willing to give Microsoft a chance. Some complain Google’s dominance has led to a lack of innovation and excessive costs for advertisers. “We think a formidable competitor is going to put some pressure on Google’s model,” says Chris Paradysz, CEO of ad agency PM Digital.

Ballmer negotiated tough terms with Yahoo. While analysts had expected he would have to spend $1 billion or more to get Yahoo to throw in the towel on search, Ballmer won’t pay anything up front and will only have to cover the expenses of taking over Yahoo’s search operations, an amount he says is “a few hundred million.” That’s a bargain, especially since Microsoft once offered $48 billion for all of Yahoo.

Microsoft has long struggled against Google. Now Ballmer is gaining substantial ground in his pursuit. “Microsoft doesn’t necessarily get it right the first time,” says Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz. “But by God, you can’t beat ‘em on persistence.”


Microsoft to hire at least 400 Yahoo workers

August 5, 2009

Associated Press

Microsoft to hire at least 400 Yahoo workers

By Michael Liedtke

August 4, 2009

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/MICROSOFT_YAHOO?SITE=ORPOR&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Microsoft Corp. will hire at least 400 workers from Yahoo Inc. if government regulators approve the companies’ proposed Internet search partnership, and Yahoo will receive $150 million to cover any unexpected costs during the switch to new technology.

Those details emerged Tuesday in a regulatory filing that elaborated on an agreement announced last week.

Sunnyvale-based Yahoo said then that an unspecified number of its 13,000 employees would be offered jobs at Microsoft after the Redmond, Washington-based software maker assumes control of the search results and search advertising on Yahoo’s Web site.

The transition is supposed to begin early next year, assuming the alliance is approved by antitrust regulators in the United States and Europe.

Microsoft will pay $50 million annually during the first three years of the 10-year contract to supplement the revenue that Yahoo will receive from the ads appearing alongside its search results. The $150 million in guaranteed payments weren’t mentioned last week.

Tuesday’s filing said Yahoo can use the $150 million to pay for unforeseen transition costs.

Yahoo’s stock has fallen by about 15 percent since it unveiled the Microsoft deal, largely because announced terms didn’t include a large upfront payment.

Tuesday’s disclosure probably won’t ease the disappointment much, given analysts had anticipated Microsoft paying $1 billion to $2 billion for access to Yahoo’s search engine. Yahoo’s shares ended Tuesday up 17 cents at $14.51. Microsoft eased 6 cents to $23.77.

Most of the revenue from the Microsoft deal will flow from ad commissions. Yahoo will receive 88 percent of the search ad revenue during the first five years of the contract. After that, Yahoo’s commission will range from 83 percent to 93 percent, depending on whether it still handles some of the ad sales in the partnership.

The main reason Yahoo decided to turn over its search engine to Microsoft was to save money. If Yahoo wants to save even more on technology, it has the option of adopting Microsoft’s online mapping service replace of its own, according to Tuesday’s filing. YahooChief Executive Carol Bartz has already made it known she isn’t impressed with Yahoo’s online maps.

As it is, transferring 400 workers to Microsoft would prune Yahoo’s current payroll by about 3 percent.

Yahoo will lay off some workers if the Microsoft deal goes through, Bartz said last week. Tuesday’s filing didn’t provide any layoff projections.

Although it also has been jettisoning workers because of the recession, Microsoft finished its latest fiscal year end in June with 93,000 employees — an increase of about 2,000 people from the previous year.

Microsoft is counting on the Yahoo partnership to help it reverse years of losses in its online operations and siphon some traffic — and ad sales — from Internet search leader Google Inc.

Yahoo’s search engine is the second largest, making it the quickest way for Microsoft to gain ground on Google. Even so, Microsoft and Yahoo combined have less than 30 percent of the U.S. search market compared to 65 percent for Google, according to comScore Inc.

To keep Yahoo happy, Microsoft will have to produce ad revenue per search that is within a certain percentage of Google’s industry-leading rate. If Microsoft doesn’t hit the target, Yahoo can abandon the partnership before the contract expires. Tuesday’s filing didn’t specify how close Microsoft has to come to Google’s revenue per search.

Microsoft estimates that Google gets 7 cents in ad revenue for every search, while Yahoo gets 4.3 cents and Microsoft gets 3.9 cents, according to a PowerPoint slide Microsoft mistakenly posted online.


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