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Businesses Communications News

Skype's Legal Situation Clears 49

chill writes "Skype's co-founders, Janus Friis and Niklas Zennstrom, have agreed to transfer ownership of the remaining Skype technology that eBay didn't own, paving the way for eBay to complete its sale of a majority stake in Skype to an investor consortium. In exchange, Friis and Zennstrom will join the investor consortium and obtain a 14 percent stake in Skype. The other consortium partners, led by Silver Lake, will own a 56 percent stake in Skype, and eBay will hold on to 30 percent, eBay said Friday."
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Skype's Legal Situation Clears

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Saturday November 07, 2009 @03:30AM (#30012896)

    I don't think it's Meg's fault that the contract lawyers screwed up royally here. You hire lawyers because no mortal is going to be able to tell what is actually transferred. If Meg knew she was buying, well, nothing then I would agree with you that it should count against her - but remember that eBay had to be told what the original owners actually owned.

    Otherwise eBay has not really been run into the ground like other companies have been, I'd say she's done about as well as could be expected apart from the whole skype thing.

  • by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Saturday November 07, 2009 @03:32AM (#30012904) Homepage Journal

    And that's a generally good idea. The amount of people using Skype is considerable, so just owning and running it should provide a goodwill in the general public for any company that's involved. That doesn't mean that the brand is worth a humongous amount of money, just that it's worth a decent amount of money.

    The bad side with Skype is that it seems to be rather bloated these days occupying a rather large amount of memory in our computers.
    It's the #3 application in memory consumption on my machine. Considering the services it's offering that is a bit high.

  • by tsa ( 15680 ) on Saturday November 07, 2009 @05:17AM (#30013160) Homepage

    That is not important. As far as I understand, only parts of the interface will be opened up. The protocul will stay closed, so you can't use in it anything but Skype. I had much rather seen it the other way around. Open protocols and document formats are far more important than open source.

  • by Malc ( 1751 ) on Saturday November 07, 2009 @05:35AM (#30013194)

    I haven't found anything that works as well as Skype. SIP is way down the list in performance. Skype could cope like nothing else when I was living in China calling the West, dealing with high latency and packet loss.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 07, 2009 @06:50AM (#30013368)

    In case you missed it, the newer versions of Pidgin support voice/video via XMPP/GTalk/etc. http://pidgin.im/ [pidgin.im]

All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin

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