PARIS
(Reuters) - A top shareholder in Skype said on Monday it wants to
see the fast-growing Internet telecoms software firm stay independent
after a report of failed takeover talks with media mogul Rupert
Murdoch's News Corp.
"The company (Skype) is worth a lot more independent,"
said Timothy Draper, managing director of Draper Fisher Jurvetson,
a Californian venture capital firm which he says owns between 10
and 20 percent of Skype.
"I would prefer that it (Skype) remains independent,"
Draper told Reuters in a telephone interview.
By allowing users to make free phone calls around the world on
the Internet, Skype is regarded as one of the biggest threats for
telecoms operators. Founded just two years ago, it already counts
more than 48 million registered users.
"Skype is in a wonderful strategic position, it's becoming
the standard communication platform for more and more people,"
Draper added.
Britain's Independent on Sunday reported that News Corp. had approached
Skype with an offer of just under $3 billion. The paper said talks
had collapsed but added Skype could be taken over shortly, without
citing sources.
Draper declined to be drawn on News Corp.'s reported approach or
any other potential bids while Skype would not comment on the report.
Skype was co-founded by Swedish businessmen Niklas Zennstrom, who
also created Kazaa, the file-sharing software that allows users
to download music from the Internet for free and caused much pain
to record companies.
Zennstrom sold the Kazaa name in 2002 amid a growing number of
court cases but kept the technology.
Voice over Internet Protocol breaks traffic into fast-moving packets
that can be sent over the Internet in the same way as e-mails.
Several European telecoms groups including Deutsche Telekom, France
Telecom, Swisscom and BT Group have already started adopting VoIP
to retain customers and stop haemorrhaging revenue.
Zennstrom told Reuters in May Skype was not planning to go public
or sell out but did not exclude the possibility of floating at some
point.
Luxembourg-based Skype, which is expecting to be cash-positive
at the end of the year, had by October 2004 raised $24 million mainly
from venture capital firms.
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