While many may have scoffed at the price News Corp paid for MySpace -- $650 million -- another social networking site may be close to selling itself for even more money. With only a fifth of the traffic of MySpace, Facebook has been offered over $900 million, an offer that is still being considered.
The Wall Street Journal reported in a front-page story Thursday that talks had restarted with the search engine, and a deal could be close. Facebook executives, including its 22-year-old CEO Mark Zuckerberg, have already held talks with Microsoft, Viacom and Yahoo previously.
Changes planned to the site could also help lure eyes away from MySpace. Whereas the site initially would only let college students with a ".edu" e-mail address join the site, it later allowed high-school students to join, and then employees of certain companies. It now plans to offer open registration soon.
Such a move may be crucial - MySpace has about 50 million monthly users, and that number is increasing at an astronomical rate. Meanwhile, Facebook only has about 10 million monthly vistors, and while it is increasing, it is nowhere close to the rate of its competitor.
Yahoo initially offered $1 billion for Facebook back in the spring of this year, however those talks fell through. Then the search engine faced some financial troubles, and traffic data indicated that the site's growth rate was not up to the standard Yahoo was looking for. The offer dropped down to about $800 million in July, and it was rejected.
Finally, within the past couple weeks Yahoo offered about $900 million, and that number was confirmed by sources for both the New York Times and Wall Street Journal. Talks are still ongoing.
Neither Zuckerberg nor spokespersons for Facebook comment on the status of the negotiations, but its discussed that deal is close to final.