Following weeks of speculation, it would appear that Google has plans
to purchase Waze after all, a service that makes use of information from
people’s smartphones to develop real-time traffic data. The search
giant will reportedly acquire the Israeli-based company for $1.3
billion, providing it with a valuable asset that should help them to
keep competitors Apple and Facebook at bay.
This is not the first time a Waze buyout has been proposed. Last May, Forbes
wrote that Facebook was interested in purchasing Waze to the tune of $1
billion. Sales talks continued up until just a few weeks ago, where
disagreements over the location of the company’s headquarters caused the
deal to fold. The big problem was that Waze wanted to stay in Israel,
while Facebook insisted on relocating the company to California.
In hopes of appeasing Waze’s CEO, Noam Bardin, Google has promised to
keep the corporation in Israel for a minimum of three years. Over this
time span, Waze will also remain an independent company and its brand
image will stay separate from that of Google.
That being said, analysts speculate that Google will start to integrate
Waze’s navigation service into their own product offerings following
the 2016 deadline.
So why the sudden interest in Waze? Not only does Google want to add
one of the premier navigation services to their fleet, but they want to
prevent Facebook from becoming a serious threat.
Ha’aretz,
an Israeli news source, added, “Google’s interest in Waze stems
principally from its aim of blocking Facebook growth. The search company
operates its own navigation service that competes head on with Waze. It
has invested heavily in its system, including the ambitious Google
Street View database of images and satellite images.”
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