Microsoft Expands Search Partnership with Facebook

Microsoft and Facebook announced an expanded search partnership today.  As part of this new global agreement,  Microsoft and Facebook will soon provide Facebook users with "a more complete search experience by providing full access to Bing’s features, helping customers make faster, smarter decisions." Here's the word:

First, we have deepened our joint work together on web search to provide even more compelling experiences to Facebook users with Bing. As part of this expanded cooperation in search, our two companies will soon provide Facebook users with a more complete search experience by providing full access to great Bing features beyond a set of links, including richer answers combined with tools that help customers make faster, smarter decisions.

Second, we are extending our cooperation outside the US, bringing the Bing-Facebook search integration to the more than 400 million people using Facebook around the world.

Lastly, we made the mutual decision that Facebook would take over responsibility for selling display advertisements on its own site. We have been working together on advertising for a long time, creating the best experience for Facebook users and advertisers. Given the kinds of advertisements that make sense within a product as unique as Facebook, it just made more sense for them to take the lead on this part of their advertising strategy. MS will continue to provide search advertisements to Facebook.

Bing will continue to exclusively power the web search results on Facebook. This change will also enable Microsoft to continue its focus on driving strong performing campaigns across our own social media and communications tools, including Windows Live Messenger and Hotmail, and via rich content environments across MSN and Xbox Live.

You will start to see the fruits of our expanded relationship show up in the Facebook experience over the weeks and months ahead. We are very excited about the work we have done with Facebook, and are really looking forward to the amazing things we can together do for our mutual customers in the months and years ahead.

Discuss this Article 11

rjohn05
on Feb 5, 2010
Can't wait to see what that will look like.
anonymous
on Feb 5, 2010
This post was mentioned on Twitter by rafaqueque: RT @thurrott: Microsoft Expands Search Partnership with Facebook: Microsoft and Facebook announced an expanded search partnershi... http://bit.ly/aaUENG
robertsjoe
on Feb 5, 2010
Microsoft is unable to provide effective advertising for Facebook, so Facebook took that away from them.
redunion1940
on Feb 5, 2010
I don't think you get it robertsjoe, they have gotten exclusive access to 400 million people, I would expect Bings market share to increase because of this, finally Microsoft is playing how they should in the market, aggressive.
rr0de74@live.com
on Feb 5, 2010
So who does non-facebook searches inside of facebook? I used facebook search maybe 2-3 times and only to search for people inside of facebook. If anyone is stealing your info and using for profit its facebook, they are the whores of information. Their attitude on privacy is flat out scary. Like I want to give them more information by doing searches for non-facebook stuff via bing inside of facebook.
Logjamming
on Feb 5, 2010
So now we can have a Windows 7 Launch Party with our facebooks friends?
Waethorn
on Feb 6, 2010
"If anyone is stealing your info and using for profit its facebook, they are the whores of information." That title is reserved for Google. Even Steve-O says their slogan is "bullsh*t".
DRWAM
on Feb 6, 2010
Wae, OT. What is a good netbook for the money? We need at least XP for our VPN Thanks, Doc
Waethorn
on Feb 6, 2010
@Doc: Have you looked at the Lenovo x100e? Get Win7 Pro on it, and you can run XP Mode for your VPN connectivity while still having a slick PC with business-grade reliability and support that runs the latest operating system well. Lenovo's additional software is very lightweight on it too (I'd suggest swapping out Norton for Forefront Client Security). I have a ThinkPad Edge (the bigger, dual-core version of the x100e - same platform though), and it's awesome. An x100e with 2GB of RAM, and Windows 7 Pro is what you need to run XP Mode properly (the x100e ships with a 32-bit base OS, not that that should matter much). $549 is what you're looking at to start. To get mobile broadband, add $100. Mobile support is good for AT&T, Verizon, or Sprint, and includes GPS functionality. You can also get options for on-site warranty service with or without accidental damage protection. Use your best judgement. It's only $99 to add 2 more years (for a total of 3) to the basic warranty coverage though (mail-in/carry-in only).
Waethorn
on Feb 6, 2010
Waethorn
on Feb 6, 2010
Oh, and check out the vids. The 3rd one goes into competitive comparisons, so it'll give you some good tips about comparing against other netbooks or ultraportables.

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