Yahoo!
announced Sunday that Ross Levinsohn will temporarily replace chief
executive Scott Thompson, who has stepped down in the face of
controversy about his allegedly inflated resume.
The
California-based company, in a compromise with activist investor Daniel
Loeb, said Fred Amoroso would take charge of the board of directors as
the struggling Internet pioneer seeks its sixth new chief in as many
years.
“Yahoo! has been struggling over recent years and this new
incident only makes matters worse for the company,” said technology
industry analyst Jeff Kagan.
“Yahoo! rode the wave up during the
last decade, but during the last several years has crossed over the top
and has been heading down the other side.”
The changes are part of
a settlement with Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point, which is waging a
proxy battle at the Sunnyvale, California-based firm.
Under the
terms of the truce, Loeb and two of his picks — Harry Wilson and Michael
Wolf — will take seats on the Yahoo! board Wednesday.
Five
current board members, including director Roy Bostock and Patti Hart,
will step down immediately and not end their terms at this year’s annual
shareholders meeting as originally planned, according to Yahoo!
“The
board is pleased to announce these changes and the settlement with
Third Point, and is confident that they will serve the best interests of
our shareholders,” Amoroso said in a statement.
Mr Thompson’s
departure comes less than five months after he was hired to inject a new
sense of urgency into the group as it struggles to compete with
Facebook and Google in online advertising.
According to the
Financial Times, the Yahoo chief executive became the centre of a sudden
storm after Third Point checked up on his credentials and discovered
that he only had a degree in accounting, not the joint degree in
accounting and computer science that had been claimed.
Pressure on
the chief executive mounted after Yahoo had at first tried to brush off
the inaccuracy in his résumé, calling it an “inadvertent error”, before
reversing course only hours later to say that its board was looking
into the matter.
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