Verizon wants $1 Billion Discount on Yahoo Acquisition Deal after Recent Scandals

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Omnipotent

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Verizon, which has agreed to purchase Yahoo for $4.8 Billion, is now asking for a $1 Billion discount, according to recent reports.

The request comes after Verizon Communications learned about the recent disclosures about hacking and spying in past few weeks.

Just two weeks ago, Yahoo revealed that at least half a Billion Yahoo accounts were stolen in 2014 hack, marking it as the biggest data breach in history.

And if this wasn't enough, the company faced allegations earlier this week that it built a secret tool to scan all of its users' emails last year at the behest of a United States intelligence agency.

Due to these incidents, AOL CEO Tim Armstrong, who runs the Verizon subsidiary, is "pretty upset" about Yahoo's lack of disclosure, and is even seeking to pull out of the deal completely or cut the price, the New York Post claimed, citing multiple sources.

"In the last day, we've heard that Tim [Armstrong] is getting cold feet," a source reportedly told the Post. "He's pretty upset about the lack of disclosure, and he's saying can we get out of this or can we reduce the price?"Armstrong is reportedly discussing a price reduction with Yahoo executives, though Yahoo is pushing back, claiming a "deal is a deal" and there's no legal recourse to change the terms, according to the paper.

Both Verizon and Yahoo have yet to comment on the matter.

Verizon announced the Yahoo acquisition deal in July, with the intention of merging it with AOL. The company is thinking to combine Yahoo and AOL to form a third force to compete with Google and Facebook for digital advertising.

The acquisition deal is supposed to close early next year, merging Yahoo's search, advertising, content, and mobile operations with AOL to reach 1 Billion users.
 

_CyberGhosT_

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Aug 2, 2015
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If Yahoo is smart, which history shows us they are not, they would take this deal
on the grounds that Verizon would then assume any liability concerning pending or
future suits brought against Yahoo. This is the deal they need and negotiate for.
Cool Share ;)
 

Exterminator

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Oct 23, 2012
12,527
Reach 1 billion users? Does that really mean 500 million plus the 500 million who were effected by both of Yahoo's blunders?
Of course Yahoo is now claiming they gave nothing to the Government and surprisingly their stock was actually slightly higher.
Verizon is in a tough spot,it might be a better option to just get out of the whole deal since it is said there are no binding legal issues in doing so.Yahoo's claim that a "Deal is a Deal" is pretty weak considering they obviously didn't disclose the breach to Verizon at the time of the deal.
 
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