The round-up of crucial stuff in Silicon Valley:

levinsohn.jpgDid MySpace’s Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson get shortchanged? — VentureBeat has heard that MySpace, the biggest success of the Web 2.0 wave so far, in terms of users, wasn’t such a great a hit for the co-founders. Word is, Chris DeWolfe ended up with a mere $5 million, even though the company was sold as part of Intermix for $580 million. We haven’t been able to confirm this (MySpace declined comment), but that’s a pittance, if true. The founders were watered down considerably by investors.

The Mercury News has an interview with Ross Levinsohn (pictured above), who runs News Corp’s Fox Interactive division — and who was behind the purchase of MySpace — and asks him whether the co-founders are unhappy. He responds: “There’s no indication to me that they’re unhappy.”

Levinsohn spoke at the Web 2.0 conference today, and addressed a different thorn — Brad Greenspan, the former chief executive of Myspace, who keeps suing the company on allegations it lied to its investors about its value. Levinsohn said:

He’s lost every single motion he’s charged against us. It’s like when Mike Tyson kept trying to win this fight, and the guy kept getting up …It’s kinda sad…two years before we bought the company, they kicked him out. For a guy who got $40 or 50 million from the sale, I mean…life’s too short.

(via Valleywag)

Yahoo’s acquisition binge at screeching halt? — Yahoo’s stock is in the toilet, and maybe that’s why its lost is appetite to buy companies. Check out this chart of acquisitions by the big three over the past years. Google and Microsoft are munching companies as eagerly as ever (18 between them), whereas Yahoo has acquired just one (Jumpcut), according to this chart at least.

timebridge.bmpTimebridge raises $6 million for… yet another calendar-scheduling company? — The San Francisco start-up, founded in March of last year that, lets you schedule meetings easily within your calendar. It has launched a private testing version. Chief executive Yori Nelken showed VentureBeat a demo Monday, and it has some cool features to save time organizing meetings among two or more people — like letting users block out possible meeting times, and letting their friends or contacts see the times through a central “meeting space.” When the friend selects a time, the slot is automatically booked for both people. So why all the dough? The company has invested resources into integrating various clients — it has a plugin for Outlook, for a Web version, for Blackberry/Treo, Apple, Thunderbird, Notes, etc — that it can work on whatever calendar you have. Timebridge wants to serve the busy professional, and is letting Google conquer the consumer market.

Mayfield and Norwest are the backers. More details at the site’s tour; see top-right). The basic service will be free, but revenue will could from a subscription for added security, archiving and admin features. Nelken thinks the market would accept a range of $30 to a $100 per user per year. It might also get referral fees from companies like Open Table.

Mashery lets you outsource your development — It handles the open API process for companies.

FON now the largest WiFi access network — VentureBeat caught up with Neil Rimer Wednesday, investor in FON, a company that lets people share each other’s WiFi routers. He says the service is doing well in Europe, particularly in Spain, and now has more access points globally than than any other WiFi access point network, including Boingo and T-Mobile. It was also a good move to hire Joanna Rees Gallanter for U.S. operatons, because she can apparently “talk a dog off a meat wagon,” a different skill than running a venture firm. The Madrid company also bought the popular Firefox extension, GSpace, for an undisclosed amount, GigaOm first reported. The FireFox extension allows users to treat their GMail accounts as an online file storage locker — to be launched in Feb 2007, it is essentially a FON router that will have a USB 2.0 port.

Workday’s missed opportunity — Dave Duffield, the founder of PeopleSoft may be back with new start-up Workday, but critique Jeff Nolan says it missed the opportunity to say something new. In other words, it got great media coverage because of Duffield, but it was ho-hum in the details.

Will Flock’s new chief executive turn things around? — From the beginning, Flock, which was supposed to be a social browser, failed to meet hyped expectations. It had potential, but never executed. A new chief exec, Shawn Hardin, has taken over the Mountain View company. He’s a media veteran, having worked at Yahoo, AOL Broadband and NBC. We’ve just had a sneak peak at Flock’s 1.0 browser, and it’s got some promising features — question is, can Flock convince people to make their browser their central work place or not.

Charles River Ventures STIRRs — Fresh from announcing its new attractive seed investment strategy (where it gives out $250,000 checks to promising ideas, Silicon Valley venture firm Charles River is getting submerged by entrepreneurs eager to pitch. It’s also been invited to mix with the masses — at the Nov. 15 STIRR event, a gig usually reserved for start-ups to give one-minute pitches. The Charles River gang — George Zachary, Bill Tai, and Susan Wu — will get 60 seconds to pitch the crowd. We bumped into Susan Wu today at the Web 2.0 conference; she said she was overwhelmed with dealflow.

Lightspeed Venture Partners keeps adding — Silicon Valley venture firm Lightspeed just named three new associates, Patrick Chiang, Andrew Chung and John Vrionis (as you’ll see on this page of blue shirts). This is the firm that recently saw a split, with several partners leaving to form Opus. We won’t call the Opus guys renegades, because they also like blue shirts ;)

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  1. MySpace guys stiffed for $5 Million? « Technically Speaking said:

    [...] VentureBeat - took on the Technically Speaking style of posting today - with a round up article. You know the one where people questioned Rex Dixon about the whole comma between subjects thing. Rex Dixon once again, within a few weeks time - just like the - Coffee with Rex Dixon show - is just one gigantic step (well days and weeks at least) of the rest of SV! [...]

  2. VentureBeat Wire » Timebridge raises $6M for calendar-scheduling product said:

    [...] See our story on Timebridge here. VentureBeat Community [...]

  3. HipMojo.com - Main Street Meets Madison Avenue, Wall Street and Silicon Valley » MySpace Guys: Sellers Regret? Too Bad for Them… said:

    [...] According to some folks, MySpace’s co-founders Chris deWolfe and Tom Anderson were “shortchanged” in their company’s sale to Fox Interactive Media for $580 million.  In this interview with Mercury News, News Corp.’s Fox Interactive Media CEO Ross Levinsohn says: [...]

  4. Vinny Lingham’s Blog » Blog Archive » links for 2006-11-10 said:

    [...] MySpace founders shortchanged, Yahoo’s binge over, Timebridge, Mashery, FON, Workday Another nice roundup. [...]

  5. $5 Million and Bitter? « Screenwerk said:

    [...] VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall reports on MySpace co-founder Chris DeWolfe being “shortchanged” by the Fox MySpace acquisition. Reportedly he received only $5 million. On the one hand, how many people have $5 million? On the other, the company was sold for $580 million and so, if true, he was really diluted. I spoke to a reporter last week who said the same thing and asked whether I’d heard that the MySpace founders were angry or frustrated with the money they received. [...]

  6. Is Less Worth More in Early Stage Startup Funding? « BZ Notes! said:

    [...] Angels are a terrific lot, by and large, but there are lots of sharks among them who should be avoided Not so savvy entrepreneurs can be eaten up alive before they even realize it. You must have read news that the MySpace entrepreneurs, despite a 580 million dollars sale to NewsCorp, barely made $5 million each? Do you want to be that entrepreneur, regardless of how much Ramen Noodle it takes to feed you? [...]

  7. VentureBeat » Yahoo acquires online contest site, Bix said:

    [...] It is the latest sign of focus by Yahoo in its acquisition strategy. Its purchases have slowed to a trickle, but the deals it has completed concern community, user-generated sites (Flickr, del.icio.us, Upcoming.org and Jumpcut), which stands in contrast with Google, which has focused on applications. [...]

  8. KtecK Blog - Syndicated » Blog Archive » Yahoo acquires online contest site, Bix said:

    [...] It is the latest sign of focus by Yahoo in its acquisition strategy. Its purchases have slowed to a trickle, but the deals it has completed concern community, user-generated sites (Flickr, del.icio.us, Upcoming.org and Jumpcut), which stands in contrast with Google, which has focused on applications. [...]

  9. Start… at No VC Required said:

    [...] Depending on the terms of the deal you cut, you may be very surprised at how little you walk away with after a liquidity event. The MySpace founders made around $5 million each from a $550 million sale of their company. [...]

  10. VentureBeat » Timebridge launches scheduling tool for professionals said:

    [...] caution — we’ve been skeptical before that yet another scheduling company might have a chance to make it. TimeBridge is clearly an [...]

  11. HourTown » VentureBeat said:

    [...] We’ve been a bit skeptical about whether companies can get much traction in this area, even if they offer a smart, simple interface like newcomer Presdo. But HourTown targets a different audience, because it focuses on helping service providers — basically, small businesses ranging from doctors to yoga instructors — schedule their appointments, and also promotes the businesses and specific openings through search engine marketing. [...]

7 Comments

  1. Smiley said:

    If Myspace founders got $5million each when they sold it for $580 million, then that means they are in a big lose! That is too bad for them to get that amount of money…such a chicken feed!!!!lol
    I pity them…Too bad.

  2. tom said:

    Everyone seems to miss the point that InterMix bought MySpace long before it was a big deal. InterMix was public and owned several web properties. So of course the MySpace founders didn’t get that much when Fox bought InterMix. The reporting on the InterMix/MySpace purchase has been generally pretty poorly researched as these are basic facts that have been consistently missed.

  3. Alex Le said:

    “If Myspace founders got $5million each when they sold it for $580 million, then that means they are in a big lose! That is too bad for them to get that amount of money…such a chicken feed!!!!lol
    I pity them…Too bad.”

    The above news is still very much a rumour so Smiley, why do you have to “pity them”, the myspace founders? If you are that easy to sell, then let me know where you are. I have this nice thing called “earth” for sales…

  4. VB Reader said:

    Matt, actually I understand that Rees-Gallanter is only the interim head of U.S. operations, and that she’ll transition into an advisory board member. (Maybe there’s still hope for FON yet.)

  5. Ryan said:

    “…an interview with Ross Levinsohn (pictured above), who runs Media News’ Fox Interactive division…”

    Dean owns Fox?

  6. Matt Marshall said:

    Ahem, thanks Ryan. As former Merc News employee, I’m too close to this. Fixed!

  7. matthew said:

    let me get on that web!!!

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