Ebay Rumored to be Buying Skype 199
JDStone writes "Rumor has it that trusted sources from The Wall Street Journal say Ebay is interested in buying Skype. Later after the announcment, Ebay Inc. shares fell 4.3 percent."
Life is a game. Money is how we keep score. -- Ted Turner
sKYPE (Score:4, Funny)
Re:sKYPE (Score:1)
I guess eBay wants to enable its users to communicate with each other during bids. Much like real life bidding...this would be fun!
Maybe they want users to talk to the seller over voIP to save money....paypal+skype+ebay=powerful bidding.
Re:sKYPE (Score:3, Funny)
Re:sKYPE (Score:2)
I send him another message offering him some options. its been another 2 weeks havn't receieved a reply yet
Re: Skype (Score:2)
Re:sKYPE (Score:2, Funny)
Re:sKYPE (Score:2)
Not just on Slashdot, but to the world in general. Consider how the two companies investors apparently felt about the deals: when Google announced its IM client, its stock went up and is still going up. eBay announces the possibility of it buying Skype, and its stock takes a nosedive.
On one hand, the innovator, on the other, the behemoth. Investors are not completely stupid, they can see the writing on the wall as easily as anyone else.
Horrible spelling (Score:5, Funny)
Back to the topic, why would EBay want to buy a peanut butter manufacturer? And if they did want to, I would think Jif would be a more appropriate takeover target.
(...wondering how many mods have their humor hat on)
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:3, Interesting)
Market analysts say [marketwatch.com] (and market analysts are never wrong) that skype "could help eBay quickly improve customer service"
Anyone who's used Paypal know how important "customer service" is to ebay
In all seriousness - as WSJ intimates, automated buyer to seller / buyer to previous buyer / etc VOIP calls, could improve ebay's model of doing business.
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:2)
1) Are +5 thread hopping
2) Didn't read the piece you quoted
3) Are making either a joke or a serious point about peanut butter that has gone over my head
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:2)
I'm not sure what you mean? You should have included:
4) All of the above.
But in answer:
4) All of the above.
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:2)
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:4, Insightful)
Explain to me exactly how VOIP calls are going to help "auction success rate" and consequentially ebay's business model? As a regular ebay purchaser and occasional ebay seller I will NOT download and install skype so that the freaky people that buy and sell stuff on ebay can talk to me via voice. I much prefer the relative anonymity of email, where I can delete abusive messages, to actual voice conversations.
With ebay's HUGE userbase, there are a large number of people out there that can't even read. If you have ever attempted to sell anything on ebay, I'm sure you've been bombarded with questions that were clearly answered in your description. Adding voice capability is just going to make dealing with these bidder more annoying. With many ebay sellers selling multiple items at a simultaneously, who is going to have time to discuss problems over VOIP?
ebay has the online auction business well dominated, why would they want to branch into something completely unrelated?
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:2)
1) If you don't like eBAYskype(tm) don't use it.
2) People who do like eBAYskype(tm) can use it.
3) More communication options are better then less.
*shrug* I hardly ever use ebay, but I use skype all the time. I see skype as being more useful - and I certainly see the use in being able to talk to someone I am buying from.
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:3, Insightful)
2) People who do like eBAYskype(tm) can use it.
Problem is, ebay is going to potentially spend BILLIONS of dollars to acquire skype. They must have a better plan than 'use it if you like it'. Adoption rate would have to be rather signficant for this deal to be worthwhile for ebay - and I can't see that happening.
I see skype as being more useful - and I certainly see the use in being able to talk to someone I am buying from.
From a buyer's perspecti
Re:Horrible spelling (Score:2)
To steal a joke from Fark (Score:5, Funny)
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:4, Funny)
Just for the record, is there any company in America which is not rumored to be on the verge of buying Skype?
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:1)
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:2)
Hey as a time traveler, I'm upset by this implication.
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:2)
Yes, this was a shameless plug.
Re:To steal a joke from Fark (Score:2)
(I'm actually a Republican, but kicking Cheney around is good bi-partisan fun.)
Skype + eBay = ??? talking auction? (Score:2, Interesting)
sure, sometimes I would like to look at the sellers face when he says, I didn't test the notebook, but I think it is running fine, but I won't guarantee...
W00t
Re:Skype + eBay = ??? talking auction? (Score:1)
You know it! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I'm starting to really worry... (Score:2)
Wall Street Journal (Score:5, Insightful)
This marriage between Ebay and Skype does have some marginal plausibility due to the need for Ebay to spend some of its reserves capturing markets outside of the online auction business. Skype needs cash to fend off Microsoft's entry into VOIP. The rumor has some potential traction, but the market has given its opinion to the deal. A drop of nearly 5% in your stock price is something a CEO and board of directors can't easily ignore.
Re:Wall Street Journal (Score:2)
qouting from Om Mallik's blog [gigaom.com]-
"I am not sure what to make of the conversations, because frankly at $2-to-$3 billion, it doesn't make sense for eBay to get into a whole new business. I can understand giving the consumers ability to click-and-call the seller/buyer.
But it can be done fairly cheaply and easily. When connecting to PSTN, eBay will then have to deal with all that comes with it, including a nosy and notoriously pesky FCC. Are they ready for it? Why not partner with someone - and there are enou
Re:Wall Street Journal (Score:2)
I would have said Google.
Re:Wall Street Journal (Score:2)
I think so. Certainly no one would question why General Electric or General Motors would own credit companies. They own them because they are an important tool for helping their customers to finance their products. But they are also a revenue stream from which they make money by lending to other borrowers who are not necessarily buying a washing machine or car. They make money just like regular credit companies do: making loans. It isn'
Re:Wall Street Journal (Score:3, Interesting)
Didn't PayPal just announce "micro" payments? We might be seeing Skype turn into a real VoIP system here. Not only that, but everyone's been looking at Skype as a vehicle for buyers interacting with sellers -- why not have *both* interact with eBay itself using Skype/POTS? Now, instead of having to have a broadband connection at the ready, you can easily bid/list/track by phone on eBay, just like the more traditional auctions. If the rumours are true, this is the directi
Re:Wall Street Journal (Score:2, Informative)
"EBay Inc. is in talks to acquire Internet-telephony company Skype Technologies SA for $2 billion to $3 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, in a deal that would represent a dramatic shift in strategy for the world's largest online auction site.
"The talks are in a sensitive stage and could fall apart, according to one person briefed on the matter. Luxembourg-based Skype, whose software allows consumers to make free telephone
What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:4, Interesting)
"Whenever a company may do something that's completely different than its historical focus, there is risk,'"
My qyestion is, what would ebay want with VIOP? Paypal and Half.com made sense for ebay to pick up, but I'm just not seeing this at all...
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:5, Insightful)
Simple as that.
Just because they started out providing one type of service doesn't mean they can't offer something new.
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:3, Insightful)
Simple as that.
Just because they started out providing one type of service doesn't mean they can't offer something new.
Investors want to see the value add. If there's no benefit to the merged company, then they won't be interested in the deal. You have to keep the investors in mind when talking about a public company.
And when a company is deciding who will buy them, they tend to look for the same. True, they look at the offer price, but
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:1)
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:2)
A move like this should have some justification other than "we think VOIP is good business", otherwise the stockholders would rather have the cash used to buy Skype as dividend to invest it themselves (to VOIP if that's what they think is wise)...
In other words: if Ebay has nothing to offer Skype
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:5, Insightful)
It may be something hard to see from the outside, but I had a few ideas:
1) Ebay has a ton of core compentency in connecting and managing a VERY large number of users, especially in near-realtime transactions. Their auction business is dependent on their technical abilities to have an easy-to-use front end for a huge user population, as well as a reliable back-end that can manage how those users want to interact with each other.
2) Ebay has a large userbase. Skype's ultimate success depends on reaching a large enough mass of users to amortize its fixed costs, and so that network effects will make its service more attractive to new users. There's a cross-selling opportunity, here, along the lines of Google offering IM on top of its email services.
3) Fraud prevention. Ebay doesn't do a perfect job of preventing fraud (phony accounts, stolen accounts, etc), but it had a lot of experience dealing with it. I would imagine that a telecom service like Skype has similar issues with people abusing accounts, or that they foresee such abuse as the service grows more popular. All of the skills and expertise needed to deal with fraud in a massive userbase (like behavior pattern analysis, customer interaction, etc.) may be cross-applicable to both industries.
But these are just guesses. I imagine that there are possibilities that Ebay and Skype see, but that are hidden from outsiders. Might as well wait and watch what happens.
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:2)
If anyone ought to get credit for that being their 'core competency,' it's IBM and Sun, who actually did the work.
Re:What does EBay want with VOIP (Score:2)
Here come the ads. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here come the ads. (Score:2)
"DO YOU NEED A LARGER P3N1S?! JUST CALL 244-2625 NOW!! BIGGER P3N!S FROM OUR PH4RMACY DIRECT TO YOU!!!1111"
I just wonder how they'll be able to speak the typos to get past the spam filters...
Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
Its not uncommon for a company with cash in the bank to buy up unrelated companies to diversify its holdings. Its much like an individual buying a mutual fund, you don't put all your eggs in one basket. Companies like Microsoft do this all the time. They've bought all kinds of seemingly unrelated companies.
Additionally, it could provide a near-turnkey solution for better buyer/seller communication, which could be cool.
From a number of persepectives, it could happen. It just doesn't look like the market approves right now.
Must of been the cheaper option.. (Score:1)
Voice phishing (Score:5, Funny)
Jerry
http://www.cyvin.org/ [cyvin.org]
paypal (Score:5, Funny)
Re:paypal (Score:5, Insightful)
Wait a minute.... (Score:5, Funny)
Rumor has it that trusted sources from Joe's coffee shop say that Sam might possibly be interested in thinking about considering reviewing the possibility of actually looking into purchasing a piece of pie.
Re:Wait a minute.... (Score:2)
Re:Wait a minute.... (Score:2, Funny)
Rumour has it that Melinda actually moved the pie from table 19 to table 20 deliberately to confuse Sam but Joe didn't know and now is having a flamewar with Sam about a possible refund...
worst. summary. ever. (Score:4, Informative)
Um, why the hell the contorted syntax? Why not just say:
The Wall Street Journal is reporting EBay is in talks to acquire Internet-telephony company Skype for $2 billion to $3 billion, in a deal that would represent a dramatic shift in strategy for the online auction giant. Bloomberg has the details [bloomberg.com] for those without a WSJ account.
Geez, Taco. Grow up and act like a real editor.
Re:worst. summary. ever. (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe the submitter has a good grasp of subtle irony?
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Come on. It's like everyone is rumored to buy Skype these days.
Google + Skype = (Score:5, Funny)
Google + Skype = soiled telco executive underwear
Ebay + Skype = telco executive goes "meh"
Re:Google + Skype = (Score:2)
Google, on the other hand, is always innovating with features that make you go "ahhhhhhhh" I needed that! It's refre
Re:Google + Skype = (Score:4, Interesting)
Reminds me of when eating at a local "mercado" in Mexico. While you eat several people will try to sell you something(sungalses, garlic, cheap jewelery, T-Shirt from your favorite soccer team, etc...).
The food is great but when your're finished you just want to get away from all that spam!
Re:Google + Skype = (Score:2)
Re:Mercado = Market (Score:2)
Re:Google + Skype = (Score:2)
A few of the cheaper youth hostels that I visited had actually replaced their phones with cheap PCs and Skype VoIP handsets. It was a great idea, except that
Rumors only help Google and Apple - not eBay (Score:5, Funny)
When will they ever learn....only Apple and Google stocks rise when rumors get out!
No, that's not right (Score:3, Informative)
Company A thinks acquiring Company B might be a good idea.
They look at the market value of Company B, and how much revenue Company B is expected to generate over x number of years, as well as how much synergistic value Companies A and B would have if they merged.
Company B looks to be a tremendous value, so Company A would do well to buy them out, right?
The problem is that Company B's shareholders are well aware of their value, and they are not going to be bought out on the cheap, p
Beautiful (Score:2)
So I won't say it.
So now you can... (Score:2)
eBay's market rating (Score:5, Funny)
You mean they're down to only "AAAAA++++++!!!111" now?
Audio bidding (Score:2)
Skype wont sell (Score:3, Interesting)
Article said eBay offered as much as $5 billion... (Score:2)
They must be infected with the same bug (Score:2)
Does that mean... (Score:3, Insightful)
Will help save their reputation (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, wait.
Re:Will help save their reputation (Score:2)
the real question is.. (Score:2)
Laughable (Score:3, Insightful)
No wonder their stocks are taking a hit. They don't even know how to run their own company right, how can anyone expect them to do the same with a totally different company?
Re:Laughable (Score:2)
Paypal, and to a lesser extent, eBay both have some problems with tech support, but I still take issue with the above statement. eBay was a very innovative idea which is why it became so successful. Paypal was a great idea, but it did have some competitors when it was coming up, so there must have been something about its interface that users preferred.
As for continuing innovation, to prevent fraud, eBay has had to c
Re:Laughable (Score:2)
That's what Skype basically is anyways, an IM program that can dial land lines. All of the other IM clients can already do voice chats.
In the News Today... (Score:5, Funny)
Meanwhile eBay announced that they had struck a deal to buy Microsoft, WalMart and a US Mint. "We can now literally print our own money, plus we will have a near monopoly in both software and tangible retail goods", said eBay President Meg Whitman. Leery of the announcement, eBay's stock price dropped to only four cents per share. "I ain't gonna trust no dot com blip blip stock", said noted day trader Erwin Lapsey. "I lost my shirt on them, and they are all evil".
Microsoft President Steve Ballmer had only three words to say about the deal: "Developers! Developers! Developers!". The sweat running down his broad manly chest then shorted out the microphones, abruptly ending the press conferences. Meanwhile, deep inside Mum-Ra's lair, the lich formerly known as Sam Walton and current President-in-Secret wheezed his single word comment about the proposed merger: "...braaains...".
--
Evan
Sweet! (Score:2)
Our Biznis model (Score:2)
2) Jack up fees until customers bail.
3) ??????
4) Profit!
Just for reference (Score:2, Funny)
Please, no American buyers! (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm worried (Score:3, Interesting)
Typically big American corporations like Ebay play ball with the government, and one of Skype's most attractive features (IMO) is that they don't allow wiretapping (the data is encrypted end-to-end).
Brilliant - I see the plan (Score:2)
Humor or insight? You decide!
This Rumor Actually Makes Sense!! (Score:3, Interesting)
I am posting fairly late in this discussion but, as no-one else has made the following connection, I will put it forward.
The key here is not Ebay but PayPal and their recent repositioning.
Before I go any further, I should mention that I don't believe anyone is going to be paying 10 figures for Skype, that's just ridiculous. From what I've heard, their P2P network is completely unsustainable, with far too few supernodes. If anyone does buy Skype, they will probably do so for the brand and customer base but replace the existing network with a more centralised one.
Skype's brand isn't really such a great catch - it would be quickly superseded if someone offered even a marginally better service - all ownership of the Skype brand would provide is a small head start. Is that worth billions? I don't know but I suspect not.
As for Skype's existing customer base, they say they have 52 million users, which really means 52 million downloads. Of those, only 2 million have ever actually parted with cash to use the Skype-Out feature that allows you to make calls to regular phones.
Now, bear in mind that I am one of those two million - I forget what I paid, probably a $5 minimum charge, just to play with the service for a while, probably used up a dollar or so calling embassies in China for a laugh. In the space of one week I downloaded Skype twice, installing it on 2 different machines to see if I could call myself. I made a grand total of ONE free call to another Skype user, a guy in Canada who posted on the Skype forum, asking for someone to call him so that he could see if Skype worked. I then annoyed a lot of people in China and, having had my fun, abandoned whatever money I had left in my account and uninstalled Skype from both machines.
If I am at all typical of first wave adopters, their active userbase is far, far smaller but they won't publicly release that figure. Ebay, however, will be well aware of it and will negotiate accordingly.
As for paying customers, well, I'm not the only person who's willing to blow a few dollars to play with a shiny new toy but quickly bored by it. How many recurring customers do they have? And how much do you think they spend on average? And how big is Skype's margin on that?
Let's say they have 1 million active paying customers (nonsense, but what the Hell), each of those would have to be valued $100 to make Skype worth a billion. That is about twice the going value of a mobile phone customer. Ridiculous.
So, having established that Skype is worth far less than over-excited journalists would have us believe, let's presume that Skype is actually willing to sell for far, far less. Who, then, would be interested in buying?
Any of the big names could probably harness the initial hype of the sale to their benefit. Yahoo could certainly use the edge against Google and they've swallowed some pretty interesting companies lately in their quest to reinvent themselves. Google knows that and would probably like to take Skype out of Yahoo's reach, but, generally, they prefer to develop their own tech in-house.
Vodaphone could do something really smart with Skype, link their networks in a way that would really blow the other mobile providers out of the water but, from what I know of corporate decision-making, that might be a little too out-of-the-box for a non-Internet company.
Which brings us back to PayPal. Last week, they announced something fairly momentous that was missed by pretty much everyone. After years of holding back the whole idea of micro-payments, they finally decided to granularize their fee scale to make smaller transactions viable. Before, you had to pay 30c + 3% of every transaction, leaving you with 67c from a dollar sale. Now, they are willing to take 5c + 5% instead, leaving you with 90c. This is huge news because it makes viable
Re:This Rumor Actually Makes Sense!! (Score:2)
Yes, forgive me, it's late and I'm tired :)
I got confused because I knew that there was a difference between the US and UK definition of a billion and, for some reason, I had it in my mind as I wrote that a US billion was 100,000,000.
Clearly, though, a valuation of $1000 per active, paying Skype user is even more ridiculous and only servers to underline that the journalists
Tit for tat (Score:2)
Re:Tit for tat (Score:2, Funny)
It's 'breast', not 'tit'.
Re:Tit for tat (Score:2)
Re:Tit for tat (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bad guys always win? (Score:2)
Re:Bad guys always win? (Score:3, Interesting)
1st Sherman Networks had nothing to do with Gator.
2nd the music industry is actually doing just fine.
3rd Napster was shut down, they did not "stop".
4th Gator is, as well as being annoying to all hell, not responsible for anyy indentity theft, or criminal action at all.
As for the rest, well since nothing prior to your skype comment had even the hint of truth I feel I can say the rest is also bullshit.
Feeding frenzy! (Score:2)
Do you have a newsletter I can subscribe to?
Just tell me this:
Where is the spyware in Skype?
What is the name of it?
Why don't ANY of the spy/malware scanners know about this?
What, pray tell, are you smoking?
OK? Do you think you can do that? Oh, and one more thing:
Can you point to
Re:Bad guys always win? (Score:2)
Yes you did, You said 'Program named *cough* "Skype", is from people who wrote *cough* "Kazaa", *cough* "Gator" and other spyware ventures.'
and dont mess people and protocols with companies I am not sure what you mean by this.
2nd the music industry sales (mean CD sales) are declining due to MP3 spreading through Kazaa and likes
No again, CD sales are UP not down.
"The number of CDs and other music products shipped from record labels to retail merchants rose 2 percent last year, to 814 mi
Re:Worst Valuation Ever (Score:2)
Re:Worst Valuation Ever (Score:2)
2 million users is woth a lot. Once you get them calling landline regularly, there amount to many millions of dollars per month, assuming your marketing people can't get more users.
I would be surprised if there are less then 3,000,000 active users.
Re:Smart move by Ebay (Score:2)
For example, Skyp is more expensice to call soneone over seas then a landline.
Can't get 911 on skype and have it trace the call
911 Cell service isn't reliable.
Not everyone has a computer, or broadband.
Landlines are far more reliable then both Skype and Cell phones.