Quote from d08:
Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang resigns from its board
Jerry Yang, the co-founder of Yahoo!, has resigned from its board.
Mr Yang founded the online company in 1995 with David Filo and was its chief executive from June 2007 until January 2009.
His resignation comes two weeks after the company hired former PayPal executive Scott Thomson to be its new chief executive.
Mr Yang annoyed some shareholders by turning down a $47.5bn (£31bn) takeover offer from Microsoft in 2008.
The company's current market value is about $20bn.
Mr Yang has also resigned from the boards of Yahoo Japan and Alibaba Group and said in a statement: "The time has come for me to pursue other interests outside of Yahoo!".
He also expressed support for the company's current management.
"I am enthusiastic about the appointment of Scott Thompson as Chief Executive Officer and his ability, along with the entire Yahoo! leadership team, to guide Yahoo! into an exciting and successful future," he said.
Yahoo! shares rose 3.4% in after-hours trading.
Some analysts had seen Mr Yang as an impediment to the sale or restructuring of the business.
"This is clearly a positive. It provides a more objective and unemotional approach to strategic alternatives," said Brett Harriss at Gabello & Co.
-------------
Another company down the drain. Having the founders run a company adds great value as they know the structure and they had the initial vision to build the company from the ground up.
Yahoo will turn into another giant run by "company men", people who have no vision but fit very nicely into the corporate system.
"Unemotional approach" is the destroyer and not the innovator of companies.