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Ask.com

newpost Ask.com Exits Mainstream Search, To Focus on Women, Eliminate Jobs newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 12:30 am on Mar. 6, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Ask.com will reevaluate its aspirations as a mainstream search engine, shifting from competing against search leaders Google and Yahoo to becoming a site catering primarily to women in the United States, and eliminating 8 percent of its workforce.
newpost As Search Speculation Swirls, Ask.com Parent IAC Faces Trial With Liberty Media newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 11:54 pm on Mar. 3, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Ask.com has faced ongoing speculation that it will abandon its search service and outsource to another firm such as search leader Google, with which it has a five-year, $3.5 billion advertising deal, a scenario parent company IAC/InteractiveCorp. has denied as it instead looks to a day in court next week, where it will defend chief executive Barry Diller's plan to split the firm into four separate companies, and in the process diminish control of Liberty Capital.
newpost Ask.com Introduces News Aggregator BigNews newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 10:39 pm on Feb. 7, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Ask.com has introduced a news searching Web site called BigNews that incorporates video, image, blog content and popularity rankings from community news site Digg with geo-targeted tracking features, the company announced Wednesday.
newpost Ask.com Parent IAC Battling Majority Stakeholder Liberty Media for Control newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 11:19 pm on Jan. 29, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Liberty Media and its billionaire chairman John Malone filed its second legal action against IAC Monday, looking to remove media mogul Barry Diller and six other directors from IAC's board, setting off increased antagonism in a dispute over control of the $7 billion e-commerce conglomerate.
newpost IAC Names Safka New CEO at Ask.com Amidst Management Shakeup newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 10:43 pm on Jan. 10, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Internet media conglomerate IAC/InteractiveCorp. late Wednesday named Jim Safka the new chief executive of its Ask.com property, as part of several executive management changes in preparation for an upcoming move to split $10 billion IAC into five separate publicly traded companies.
newpost Ask.com Parent Company IAC Stock Downgraded newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 10:17 pm on Jan. 2, 2008 (utc 0)

 
Oakland, California-based Internet search and media firm Ask.com today saw the stock rating of its $10 billion parent company InterActiveCorp (IAC) downgraded from "buy" to "hold" by financial services company Citigroup.
newpost Ask.com Parent IAC Reaches Video Agreement with Brightcove newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 11:40 pm on Dec. 19, 2007 (utc 0)

 
Media conglomerate IAC/Interactive Corp. has reached an agreement with online video and television distribution service Brightcove Inc. that will allow syndication of video at IAC's 60-plus Web properties including Ask.com, Match.com, LendingTree and the Home Shopping Network.
newpost Ask.com Coming to China Amidst $100M IAC Move newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 12:27 am on Nov. 27, 2007 (utc 0)

 
Ask.com, the Oakland, California-based Internet search and media company which is a part of media giant InterActiveCorp (IAC), will bring its services to the most populous country in the world within two years, as part of a $100 million initiative to start a new media and advertising company in China, according to IAC chairman and chief executive Barry Diller.
newpost $10 Billion IAC Splits Five Ways Hoping to Grow newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 11:56 pm on Nov. 8, 2007 (utc 0)

 
Barry Diller to spin off Ask.com and the rest of his huge media and Internet empire. Media giant IAC/Interactive Corp. chairman and CEO Barry Diller is planning to split the corporation, which includes Ask.com, Ticketmaster, LendingTree and the Home Shopping Network among nearly 60 other businesses, into five separate public companies.
newpost Ask.com Cuts Server Power Usage By 30 Percent newpost
Lane_R_Ellis, 11:20 am on Nov. 2, 2007 (utc 0)

 
Working with Dell to Follow Google's Data Center Sustainable IT Success. Internet search and media company Ask.com has begun working with computer maker Dell Inc. to develop custom energy efficient servers destined for use in large data centers, where thousands of computers work collectively to meet the huge demands placed on the company's search engine.
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