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To: JF2155 who wrote (3243)5/20/1999 11:35:00 PM
From: stockvalinvestor  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7772
 
EBAY NEWS: APRIL VISITORS DOWN 10% TO 7.2 MILLION FROM 8.0 MILLION IN MARCH 1999.

Thursday May 20, 8:47 pm Eastern Time

Portals multiply, get slimmer slice of
pie-analyst

NEW YORK, May 20 (Reuters) - While the number of Web
media networks and Internet gateways are increasing, visitor
numbers are shrinking as the sites divide up the same audience
between more players, an analyst said of new April Internet traffic
data.

A report by research company Media Metrix Inc.
(Nasdaq:MMXI - news) of New York showed top Web
networks like Lycos (Nasdaq:LCOS - news), Go Network
backed by Walt Disney Co. (NYSE:DIS - news) and Excite
(Nasdaq:XCIT - news) all losing visitors between March and April.

No. 4-ranked Lycos lost 3 million month-to-month to drop to 28.8 million visitors in April, while
No. 5 Go Network and No. 7 Excite both lost 1.3 million visitors, amid a slight drop in the
estimated 65 million U.S. Internet users at home and work.

Media Metrix surveys up to 40,000 computer users and publishes statistics on visitors to the top 50
Web sites each month. Advertisers use the studies to set online ad rates.

John Robb with Gomez Advisors, an Internet consulting firm in Concord, Mass., said the survey
suggested competition was heating up between portals - popular entrances to the Internet. But
Robb added that he considered Media Metrix's data ''a very rough cut'' of actual Web traffic
patterns.

''There are more portals now competing for the same number of people,'' said analyst John Robb.
''It means that there will be fewer people going to specific portals.''

America Online Inc. (NYSE:AOL - news), the No. 1 network of sites, including its online services
and stand-alone Web sites, dipped to 46.4 million visitors from 47 million in the previous month. Its
overall audience reach was 71 percent of the total universe of Web users. Microsoft Corp.
(Nasdaq:MSFT - news), the No. 2 most visited network, rose to 32.4 million from 31.9 million.

No. 3-ranked Yahoo Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO - news) lost some visitors but regained its lead over
rival Lycos, which it had temporarily lost in March. Microsoft and Compaq Computer Corp.'s
(NYSE:CPQ - news) AltaVista network were two of the few portals to gain visitors in April.

EBay Inc. (Nasdaq:EBAY - news) and Network Associates Inc. (Nasdaq:NETA - news) stood
out among other sites that saw a shift in visitors. EBay, ranked number 20 among the top-50 sites,
saw its visitors fall to 7.2 million in April from 8 million in March.

Network Associates, on the other hand, saw visitors rise to 3.8 million in April from 2.4 million the
previous month.

A Media Metrix spokeswoman attributed the increase to people going in search of the company's
anti-virus software in the wake of the Melissa virus scare.

Lanny Baker of Salomon Smith Barney disagreed with the pessimistic view. He cited Yahoo's and
Lycos's relative audience reach as examples of how things have not changed dramatically among the
leading players in the Web media world.

Baker said that in the last three months Yahoo's audience reach has hovered over 50 percent while
Lycos' share has remained just below 50 percent, except for March when it was over half the
sample population.

''This month's data looks a lot like last month's data,'' Baker said.

Highlighting the difficulty of tracking Web use, a separate survey focused solely on home Internet
use by the Internet audience measurement venture of Nielsen Media Research (NYSE:NMR -
news) and NetRatings Inc. arrived at a somewhat different count.

The study for the week ended May 16 put AOL's total audience reach at 40 percent of the Internet
market, followed by Yahoo at No. 2, with 30 percent, Microsoft's MSN at 26.5 percent and
Lycos with 17.5 percent.