Friday, June 27, 2008

Microsoft Acquiring Semantic Searcher Powerset For $100 Million: Report

Well if it can’t get Yahoo’s (NSDQ: YHOO) search business… Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) will acquire semantic search engine Powerset for more than $100 million, according to Matt Marshall at VentureBeat.
His exact language is that the company “has agreed to acquire” the
company and that it will be announced next month. SF-based Powerset has
been something of a media darling, despite the fact that it hasn’t
taken off yet. In 2006 it raised a $12.5 million first round from
Foundation Capital and The Founders Fund, as well as various angels,
including Esther Dyson and PayPal founder Luke Nosek. Despite years of
interest in “semantic” or “natural language” search, this area is a
long way from proving that it works much better than current search
technology. VentureBeat also reports that its first round valued the
company at $42.5 million, so this wouldn’t be a huge win for the
investors. But given the uncertainty of this area, and the cash
requirements of an independent search engine, this might’ve looked like
a pretty attractive outcome.

For Microsoft, this deal would be a drop in the bucket—a tuck-in,
really. And by buying what’s basically a technology company, not one
with much market traction, it’s a sign that in the absence of Yahoo, it
still wants to compete with Google (NSDQ: GOOG) by out-engineering it.

Article Link


No comments: