October 14, 2009

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Microsoft search engine makes steady progress

The websites of Bing, Microsoft and Yahoo are displayed on a computer monitor, in July 2009 in San Anselmo, California. Bing, Microsoft's new search engine, is making steady if unspectacular progress in its bid to wrest a bigger share of the lucrative US search and advertising market away from Google.
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The websites of Bing, Microsoft and Yahoo are displayed on a computer monitor, in July 2009 in San Anselmo, California. Bing, Microsoft's new search engine, is making steady if unspectacular progress in its bid to wrest a bigger share of the lucrative US search and advertising market away from Google.

Bing, Microsoft's new search engine, is making steady if unspectacular progress in its bid to wrest a bigger share of the lucrative US search and advertising market away from Google.

Bing increased its share of the US search market to 9.4 percent in September from 9.3 percent in August, according to figures released Wednesday by online tracking firm comScore.

It was the fourth month in a row of modest gains for Bing, which the Redmond, Washington-based software giant unveiled in late May accompanied by a 100-million-dollar advertising campaign.

Google, meanwhile, increased its share of the US to 64.9 percent in September from 64.6 percent in August, said.

Yahoo! saw its market share fall half-a-point to 18.8 percent in September. Ask.com and AOL were unchanged at 3.9 percent and 3.0 percent respectively.

Yahoo! and Microsoft, after months of negotiations, unveiled a 10-year Web search and partnership in late July that set the stage for a joint offensive against Google.

Under the agreement, Yahoo! will use Microsoft's search engine on its own sites while Yahoo! will provide the exclusive global sales force for premium advertisers.

The agreement between the and software giant, which is subject to review by US anti-trust regulators, is expected to close in early 2010.

(c) 2009 AFP

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