Apple-Google learn corporate governance 1.0

Posted by: Eric Auchard

The resignation of Google CEO Eric Schmidt from Apple’s board should come as no surprise to anyone with an inkling of what corporate governance means.

But then Silicon Valley’s idea of corporate boards has long consisted of cozy, interlocking directorships which would be considered collusion in most other industries.

Google’s CEO is not leaving Apple’s board voluntarily. He is only stepping down in response to the increased government scrutiny of obvious potential conflicts of interest between the two companies.

Yet regulators shouldn’t be content with Schmidt’s departure. The truth is that Apple and Google have been heading into the same markets for years. A veritable chain of overlapping business ties remain in place even if the most obvious formal link is now broken.

The chairman of Apple’s board, former Genentech CEO Art Levinson, remains on Google’s board. Another Google board member, Ann Mather, is the former chief financial officer of Steve Jobs’ former animation company, Pixar Studios.

Paul Otellini, the CEO of Intel Corp, Apple’s main chip supplier, also sits on Google’s board. Al Gore remains on Apple’s board, but in his new turn as venture capitalist he has many business ties to Google and its founders. Gore is a partner of Google board member John Doerr at legendary Silicon Valley VC firm Kleiner Perkins.

For months, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission has been examining Schmidt’s participation on the boards of the tech world’s two most dynamic companies. Last week, the Federal Communications Commission said it was looking into Apple’s decision to reject a Google phone application to run on the iPhone.

Google’s CEO says he has consistently recused himself from Apple board discussion of the iPhone. There’s no reason not to take him at his word. But that’s largely a distraction from the bigger issues at stake here.

Schmidt need not have participated actively in iPhone discussions. By taking part in discussions of the rest of Apple’s strategy, Schmidt was in a position to steer Google’s own strategies around the Apple juggernaut. Rivals need not cooperate directly to divvy up markets.

Anyone following the industry knows that Apple and Google have been moving in similar directions since well before Schmidt joined Apple’s board three years ago. As computers become more like phones and the Internet becomes more mobile, the competition has become only more obvious.

By August 2006, both companies were hard at work on their plans to enter the mobile phone market. In September 2005, Apple made its first failed foray into the market with a joint development effort with Motorola that led to the introduction of the Motorola ROKR iTunes phone.

A month before — and a year before Schmidt joined Apple’s board — Google had acquired mobile device start-up Android, forming the genesis of its own push into mobile phone markets.

Six months after Schmidt became a director, Apple unveiled its ground-breaking iPhone, in January 2007. Fevered speculation mounted throughout 2007 that Google was working on its own so-called GPhone.

In November of that year, Google introduced its Android software for mobile phone development. In September of 2008, the first Android-powered phone built by Taiwan phone maker HTC for T-Mobile was introduced.

So far, Apple has been content to attack the high-end of the smartphone market. Google is aiming at the mid-priced phone market and new mini-notebook computers with Android. But the conceit that the two companies aren’t competitors is wearing thin.

Reforming corporate boards has never been easy in Silicon Valley. Recall the boardroom battles that cost former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina her job. They pitted H-P’s old guard against corporate governance advocates who were Fiorina’s allies. The decline of Yahoo is another obvious example of failed board governance.

Independent corporate governance is an afterthought in the go-go corporate culture of Silicon Valley, where entrepreneurs backed by venture capitalists launch start-ups. Even years after an IPO, the founders and their VC backers typically keep disproportionate control over “their company.”

Investors bear no small part of the blame. Most care only in retrospect, once rocket-fueled growth subsides and the shares of former high-tech stars fall back to Earth.

For now, both Apple and Google shares are moving higher, as the tradition of weak corporate governance looks set to survive a while longer.

http://blogs.reuters.com/commentaries/2009/08/03/apple-google-learn...

Views: 36

Comment

You need to be a member of 12160 Social Network to add comments!

Join 12160 Social Network

Comment by Tara on August 4, 2009 at 2:28pm
....and by the way I meant Eric Schmidt resigns from the Apple board but then again Google and Apple are more like one entity now anyways! They are all in bed together.....such sluts, lol!
Comment by Tara on August 3, 2009 at 7:05pm
I just thought this article was rather interesting, not because of Schmidt's resignation from Google, however forced it looks like, but Al Gores involvement with both Google and Apple. Can we say someones been bending over rather easily to his masters and getting paid to do it? What a man whore!!!!!!

If he's not trying to save the world from Global Warming, while jet setting around the planet to speak on such a valuable and noble cause....... and oh yes, he's getting paid to do it....caugh, caugh (can you feel the sarcasm?) Now he's in bed with both the biggest players in the technology world and getting paid for that too!

I do wonder, however why Eric Shmidt was let go. Was he not willing to bend over all the way??????

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Burbia commented on Sandy's photo
Thumbnail

FB_IMG_1710523455761

"Is that the narrative now? Its more like Tik Tok influenced the younger generation to not be…"
4 hours ago
Burbia commented on Less Prone's photo
Thumbnail

Rebuilding Khazaria

"Who exactly are these beings? They violently push their way into the Middle East claiming it their…"
4 hours ago
Less Prone posted a photo

Famine or War What Would it Be

How far are these monsters allowed to go?
14 hours ago
Less Prone favorited cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
14 hours ago
Less Prone commented on cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
"It's so cruel and unfair. So many innocent people fell for it and even now the wictims are…"
14 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on truth's video
Thumbnail

MSM Admits US Funding Al-Qaeda & Taliban Terror Attacks

"In all likelihood if the MSM comes up with an explanation it's probably pure unadulterated…"
15 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on truth's video
Thumbnail

MSM Admits US Funding Al-Qaeda & Taliban Terror Attacks

"Mark Levin talks about all the front groups funded by Soros that have provided revenue for the…"
15 hours ago
Doc Vega favorited cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
15 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
"Sad, but this is the fate of those who don't take heed and refuse to do their due diligence…"
15 hours ago
Doc Vega posted blog posts
17 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on Sandy's photo
Thumbnail

FB_IMG_1710523455761

"Hi Thia I'm back with news.... gvmnt will not protect you from Tick Tock, at this point it…"
19 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's blog post Dr. Aseem Malhotra's Explosive Court Testimony on COVID "Vaccines"(UPDATED)
"More news dripping out from this story. ( found on Slay news…"
19 hours ago
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's blog post The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )
20 hours ago
cheeki kea posted a blog post

The saddest post I've ever read. ( vaccine victim speaks out. )

You know what, I think if God had a message for us here it would be the one that goes... Be as Wise…See More
22 hours ago
Burbia commented on Burbia's group The Comment Section is Closed
"So far, there are 14 comments here for the video about Iran's influence on Generation Z and…"
yesterday
tjdavis posted videos
Wednesday
tjdavis posted photos
Wednesday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
Tuesday
Larry Harmen posted blog posts
Tuesday
Larry Harmen posted videos
Tuesday

© 2024   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted