'firm'에 해당되는 글 3건

  1. 2009.01.29 Wall Street's Most Powerful Law Firm by CEOinIRVINE 1
  2. 2008.12.20 Your Spying iPhone by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.12.11 Yahoo investor urges search unit sale to Microsoft by CEOinIRVINE

In good times and bad, Skadden's lawyers make money on upheavals in global capitalism.

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From left, Joe Flom, Eric Friedman and Robert Sheenan

Skadden. The name, terse and uncompromising, symbolizes the most rarefied levels of corporate law, where clients throw platoons of attorneys at a problem and barely blink at the resulting $50,000-an-hour bills.

With 1,700 attorneys and $2.2 billion in fees last year, New York's Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom is the biggest U.S. law firm by revenue and the third biggest worldwide. The partnership's $693 million profit in 2007 exceeded the net income of much larger companies, including Yahoo! (nasdaq: YHOO - news - people ), Southwest Airlines (nyse: LUV - news - people ) and Avon Products (nyse: AVP - news - people ). By revenues, Skadden ranks No. 213 on our list of the Largest Private Companies in America.


All that money flows from a simple business model: Skadden specializes in advising companies when they are merging, being taken apart or face a mortal threat from regulators, competitors or other lawyers.

Having grown to the size where it's involved in practically every big transaction on Wall Street, Skadden has become a brand name--and a security blanket for nervous executives. "When something doesn't go right, the general counsel can say to the CEO, 'I had Skadden on it,' " says Eric Friedman, 44, who is slated to succeed Robert Sheehan, 61, this spring as executive partner in charge of the firm.

This isn't law firm puffery. In the 1950s, Skadden practically invented one of the most lucrative branches of corporate law, the art of mounting and defending against hostile takeovers. Inside its headquarters near Times Square are several floors of conference rooms where executives and lawyers huddle day and night, negotiating multibillion-dollar transactions or plotting strategy on how to keep raiders at bay.

"I've often thought they should set up an index based on the activity in those conference rooms," jokes Edward Knight, general counsel of Nasdaq OMX Group, which last year enlisted Skadden's help in the Nasdaq's complicated, $3.7 billion takeover of Sweden's OMX exchange.

The Skadden Index would be down a bit, as the carnage on Wall Street tamps down enthusiasm for its mainstay mergers and acquisitions work. Despite the turmoil in financial markets, those rooms are still busy: Skadden recently represented Nomura in the purchase of international operations from bankrupt Lehman Brothers (nyse: LEHMQ - news - people ), and helped Citigroup (nyse: C - news - people ) sell its outsourcing business to India's Tata Consultancy Services (other-otc: TACSF.PK - news - people ) for $505 million.


Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Your Spying iPhone

Business 2008. 12. 20. 03:37

Careful, iPhone users: Your smart phone may be smarter than you think.

On Thursday researchers at Finnish cybersecurity firm F-Secure said they have spotted the first known instance of iPhone "spyware" called Mobile Spy, a piece of commercial software that sells for $99 a year.


Mobile Spy developer Retina-X Studios says the software can invisibly track the call logs, text messages and even the GPS data of any iPhone it's installed on, allowing the eavesdropper to track the user's whereabouts on a Web site that hosts the stolen data.

"Mobile Spy will reveal the truth for any company or family," the company's site advertises. "You will finally learn the truth about [your family members' or employees'] call, mobile-Web and text-message activities by logging into your Mobile Spy account from any computer. The world's first iPhone spy software!"

Smart phone spyware for other platforms isn't new: Commercially available spyware for Windows Mobile and Symbian operating systems have existed for years. But Mobile Spy's software is the first spyware vendor to target Apple's (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) growing marketshare in the telecom world.

While Mobile Spy currently targets only iPhone 3G users, another vendor known as Flexispy advertises a similar program that is compatible with both iPhone versions launching Dec. 21. Both programs require the user to "jailbreak" their targets' iPhone, a simple software hack that allows applications not approved by Apple to be installed.

Since before the iPhone's 2007 launch, cybersecurity researchers have been warning about the potential for malicious software that could secretly install itself to steal passwords or use the iPhone to send spam--just as cybercriminals have long been hijacking PCs (see "Hacking the iPhone"). While hackers have demonstrated those kinds of exploits in theory, "in the wild" threats have yet to appear. And cybercriminals aren't likely to use commercially available software like Mobile Spy and Flexispy to infect victims via the Internet.

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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One of Yahoo Inc.'s largest shareholders, Ivory Investment Management LP, is urging the Internet company to pursue a sale of its search unit to Microsoft.

In a letter to the company's board, the investment firm proposed a deal Wednesday in which Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) would acquire Yahoo (nasdaq: YHOO - news - people )'s search engine and Yahoo would retain 80 percent of revenue generated by search queries on its own site.

Ivory said Yahoo could get about $15 billion from Microsoft for the search platform alone, a deal it said would give shareholders a value of $24 to $29 per share, or more than double Yahoo stock's closing share price Tuesday of $12.19.

Yahoo shares rose 62 cents, 5.1 percent, to $12.81 in morning trading Wednesday.

Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang said recently that he would resign, a response to shareholder discontent that brewed after Yahoo rebuffed a $47.5 billion takeover offer from Microsoft for the entire company. Before stepping down, Yang said he was still open to some kind of a deal with Microsoft, after antitrust concerns sank Yahoo's planned advertising partnership with Google Inc. (nasdaq: GOOG - news - people )

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has said a takeover of Yahoo is off the table but has expressed interest in the company's search business.

In the letter Wednesday, Ivory took Yahoo's board to task for not seeking a deal with Microsoft more aggressively and accused the company of ignoring shareholder interests. The firm holds 21.4 million, or about 1.5 percent, of Yahoo's shares.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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