CEO Jerry Yang told the CES 2008 crowds about Yahoo's plans to make its Mail client a social tool with all the widgets one could want.
It's no crime that Yahoo was slow to recognize social networking as the replacement for web portal stickiness, and CEO Jerry Yang wants to start bringing the masses back to Yahoo, if only for a brief visit.
After an earnings announcement that beat Wall Street expectations, Yahoo CEO and co-founder Jerry Yang revealed a little more of what he thinks the company needs to do.
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and general counsel Michael Callahan have been requested to attend a House Committee on Foreign Affairs meeting over Yahoo's role in the incarceration of a journalist in China.
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and general counsel Michael Callahan have been requested to attend a House Committee on Foreign Affairs meeting over Yahoo's role in the incarceration of a journalist in China.
Net income for Yahoo's third quarter of 2007 turned out to be the same 11 cents per diluted share it was during the same quarter in 2006.
Not much information has emerged in the wake of Yahoo's executive all-day meeting, other than the attendance of Apple CEO Steve Jobs as inspirational speaker.
Between Google and a seemingly endless slew of challengers like Facebook and MySpace, Yahoo could be grilled like a panini in the battle for display advertising dollars.
Welcome aboard, Chief Yahoo.
I did a little asking around, to some people that matter in the industry, people that care about your search division, and especially about your Panama rollout. What will happen next? Anything cool? Bold?
I've got some rough news for you: they don't think you'll do it. Maybe they don't think you can do it. Everybody's couching their language in lukewarm "we'll see" platitudes.
Well, it's good to get that out of the way. Low expectations mean at least you can beat them, I guess.
The morning after Yahoo's Terry Semel resigned the CEO task has founder Jerry Yang doing two interim jobs and newly minted president Sue Decker a step closer to the top.
Less than a week after Yahoo CEO Terry Semel assured incensed shareholders he had enough "fire in [his] belly" to bring Yahoo out of its slump, Semel has announced his resignation.