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Yahoo boss Semel tunes in to online TV

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CIOL Bureau
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Adam Pasick

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CAMBRIDGE: Yahoo Chief Executive Terry Semel outlined his television strategy on Friday, saying that the Internet company wants to commission original content without aping existing TV networks.

Speaking to a group of top British TV executives who were not sure whether to regard Yahoo as friend or foe, Semel urged them to index their dormant archives and add them to Yahoo's video search service.

"Video search is a way to monetise some of the stuff that's lounging around in warehouses and hasn't made a dime for years," he said at the Royal Television Society conference.

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Yahoo and its rival Google are each negotiating for the rights to a wide range of TV content, but broadcasters have been reluctant to give up control or lose out on advertising revenue. The BBC, Britain's publicly-funded broadcaster, has also promised to open up its own massive archive.

Yahoo has worked alongside television networks to promote shows like "America's Top Model" with sneak peeks and dedicated Web pages. Semel said that the company hopes to go further, and urged independent producers to think of Yahoo as an outlet for new programming.

"I don't think that Yahoo or any other Internet company should try to become a television network," Semel added. "We will be nowhere if we have to create our own content."

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He warned TV executives that television would lose an increasingly large slice of the advertising pie in coming years due to fragmenting audiences and the prevalence of ad-skipping technologies -- especially since consumers were spending more and more time on their computers.

"Where audiences go, advertisers tend to follow," he said. On the sidelines of the conference Semel told Reuters that e-commerce giant eBay, which already competes with Yahoo in auctions, could become a rival in communications services in the wake of its acquisition of Internet telephony firm Skype this week.

"Clearly they're going into communications. Whether they're going to be a threat, it's too soon to tell," he said.

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