Yahoo calls 20% layoff report 'inaccurate'

12.11.2010
Yahoo is denying reports that the company is in the midst of a 20% reduction of its workforce.

Rumors began swirling online late on Thursday afternoon when high-tech blog , citing unnamed sources, reported that the online company is preparing to lay off 20% of its entire staff of about 14,000, or 2,800 people.

The company is not denying there are in the works, but is trying to temper the report. " is always evaluating expenses to align with the company's financial goals," Yahoo representative Dana Lengkeek told Computerworld by e-mail. "However, a 20% reduction in Yahoo's workforce across the board is misleading and inaccurate."

Speculation about layoffs at Yahoo comes just one day after reports surfaced that another Internet icon, , was getting ready to hand out 10% pay raises across the board at the beginning of the new year.

Once an Internet giant and pioneer, Yahoo has slipped into a distance in the hot search market, where Yahoo recently tossed out its own and formalized a to use Bing search for all of Yahoo's sites.

Last month, the Internet was abuzz with speculation that in buying Yahoo.

Citing unnamed sources, the Wall Street Journal reported that AOL's plan to buy Yahoo was so preliminary that it hadn't even included entered discussions with Yahoo.

"Putting AOL and Yahoo together is like tying two rocks together to make one of them float," Gabriel Consulting Group analyst Dan Olds has said previously of a potential Yahoo-AOL deal.

Sharon Gaudin covers the Internet and Web 2.0, emerging technologies, and desktop and laptop chips for Computerworld. Follow Sharon on Twitter at or subscribe to . Her e-mail address is .

in Computerworld's Internet Search Topic Center.