Searchmetrics analyzed search results in March 2013 over several hundred thousand keywords and discovered the two most prominent news listings were both AOL owned properties Patch.com and Huffington Post.
EMarketer predicts Google will remain the leader in display ad revenues in 2013 with $3.11 billion in 2013, followed by Facebook ($2.75 billion), Yahoo ($1.37 billion), Microsoft ($760 million) and AOL ($540 million).
Data in AOL contains web and image searches (powered by Google), video (powered by Blinkx), News, Shopping, Maps, and Yellow Pages (powered by various providers). A comprehensive description of this tool can be found in Bing Keyword Research Tool...
Google sites led the way with 13.1 billion searches (up 11 percent) followed by Microsoft sites with 3.2 billion searches (up 12 percent), Yahoo sites with 2.3 billion (up 9 percent), Ask Network with 536 million, and AOL with 331 million (up 7...
Prior to joining Yahoo, Seth worked at AOL briefly. The news of Seth's departure was confirmed by an email from Mayer the day after news broke that Yahoo's former Chief Information Security Office, Justin Somaini, left the company.
In recent years, search market share has remained mostly unchanged – for much of the world, it’s Google followed by every other search engine (in the U.S.the “Big 5” search engines consist of Google, Bing, Yahoo, Ask.com and AOL, which combine for...
Meanwhile, Google sites, driven primarily by video viewing at YouTube, ranked as the top online video content property in September with 150.3 million unique viewers, followed by Yahoo sites with 57.4 million, AOL with 53.8 million, VEVO with 50.3...
I tried to remember all of my various accounts, but honestly have no idea how many I created since my first AOL and CompuServe accounts in 1993. Close desktop news alerts. Something at Yahoo.delicious?
Searches with a mapping/navigation intent on the Big 5 Engines (Google/Bing/Yahoo/Ask/AOL) are down 34 percent over the past 15 months, going from 74.8 million to 49.5 million in August. A sizeable population of users, no doubt, but clearly not a...
Oh yes, we must not forget that Marissa Mayer in 2005 (seven years ago, which might as well be a different century in this fast-paced industry) declared (in discussing its advertising deal with AOL) that “There will be no banner ads on the Google...
Google led the way with 11.8 billion searches (up from 11.4 billion in June); second-place Bing accounted for 2.7 billion (up from 2.6 billion in June); Yahoo was third at 2.2 billion (unchanged); Ask was fourth with 548 million searches (up from...
Well, Nextag doesn’t appear for this search on Google or Google-powered organic results (AOL/Ask), but it does on Bing/Yahoo – though it’s hardly prominent on any of these search engines, being pushed down by ads and links to shopping options.
A different network then Advertise.com, Advertising.com actually falls under the AOL umbrella and offers decent traffic at a low CPC. The network actually contains some high quality sites such as New York Post, ESPN, NFL, NCAA, Fox News and CNN.
Bartz was still steering the ship when Yahoo entered into an agreement with Microsoft and AOL to band together to sell off Class 2 display ad inventory. Yahoo’s stock got a bump in the wake of the news of Thompson’s departure, rising 3.1 percent in...
Google ranked first with 11.4 billion searches (down from 12.2 billion in March); Bing with 2.6 billion (down from 2.8 billion); Yahoo with 2.3 billion (down from 2.5 billion); Ask with 511 million (down from 555 million); and AOL with 271 million...
In March 2011, Google sites ranked as the top online video content property with 143.2 million unique viewers, followed by AOL with 57.0 million viewers, Yahoo sites with 56.4 million viewers, Microsoft sites with 53.1 million viewers, and VEVO...
For the purposes of this research, search engines are defined as the big 5 web searches – Google web search, Yahoo web search, Bing web search, AOL web search, and Ask web search – while news site search includes the six largest news sites based...
Interestingly, neither Spreading Santorum nor the Urban Dictionary’s particularly cringe-worthy listings are anywhere to be found on the front pages of other search engines, namely DuckDuckGo, Ask.com, AOL.com, or Blekko.
Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and AOL are on board with a new White House “Do Not Track” technology plan that will give more control to users and more power to the Federal Trade Commission. Companies that are [Digital Advertising Alliance] members...
AOL The fact that a law like SOPA or PIPA can be fast-tracked with no mention on the nightly news, no debate, in closed sessions Yahoo While many cheered, “SOPA is dead! the statement was not a bill killer.not even close.