• On MovieTome: Leaked images from TRANSFORMERS 2?
April 18, 2008 5:00 AM PDT

Pageflakes enters the LiveUniverse

LiveUniverse has acquired Pageflakes, a personalized home page service that had been rumored to be in need of a buyer. Pageflakes competes with the giants--Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and AOL, as well as Netvibes. It's no wonder that the company was looking for an exit. The acquisition was first reported by Techcrunch.

LiveUniverse was founded by Brad Greenspan, a founder of MySpace, and claims 55 million monthly unique users for its more than 30 entertainment sites, which include LiveVideo, LyricsDownload and TuneBlast. Initially, Pageflakes will be used to create "My LiveVideo" personalized pages.

Pageflakes CEO Dan Cohen, who previously worked on personalization at Yahoo and Google, will continue to run Pageflakes as a LiveUniverse subsidiary and also become senior vice president of LiveUniverse, reporting to Greenspan.

Deal terms were not disclosed.

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
Recent posts from Webware
Facebook announces 25 developer grant finalists
Flock 2.0 out of beta: Gets current Mozilla engine, MySpace support, more
Adobe fends off rivals with Flash Player 10
An undelivered campaign promise: You2gov
Run your own election at Plurk
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
by matrixmoo April 18, 2008 5:40 PM PDT
Pageflakes bringing their personal start page to LiveUniverses' media sites? It definitely adds more depth and engagement for its users. Congrats to LiveUniverse and Pageflakes.
Reply to this comment
by Vlogger April 19, 2008 6:56 AM PDT
You can already preview how Pageflakes will be integrated with LiveVideo at http://livevideo.pageflakes.com/ LiveVideo will become my favorite web site if I can customize it to combine my vlogging and blogging interests with RSS feeds for my news sources.
Reply to this comment
by wslover May 12, 2008 3:33 PM PDT
It is believed Live Universe will be seeing at least one law suit from not completing payment for previous purchases of widget sites. So, how can they afford such a big property?
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right