Yandex
Native name | Яндекс |
---|---|
MCX: YDEX | |
Industry | |
Founded |
|
Founder |
|
Headquarters | Moscow, Russia |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
Products | List of Yandex products and services |
Revenue | 356,171,000,000 Russian ruble (2021) |
28,461,000,000 Russian ruble (2023) | |
21,775,000,000 Russian ruble (2023) | |
Total assets | 786,628,000,000 Russian ruble (2023) |
Number of employees | 25 431 (2022) |
Parent | Yandex N.V., Schiphol Boulevard 165, Schiphol Airport, Netherlands |
Website | |
Footnotes / references [2][3][4] |
Yandex LLC (Russian: Яндекс, romanized: Yandeks, IPA: [ˈjandəks]) is a Russian multinational technology company[5] providing Internet-related products and services, including an Internet search engine called Yandex Search, cloud computing launched in 1997, information services, e-commerce, transportation, maps and navigation, mobile applications, and online advertising.[6][2] Yandex Holding Company was incorporated in 2000. As of 2016, it primarily served audiences in Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Ukraine, Turkey and countries with a significant Russian-speaking population.[7][8]
As of 2017, the firm was the largest technology company in Russia.[9] It had more than 30 offices worldwide in 2018.[10] Its main competitors in the Russian market are Google, Microsoft, VK, and Rambler. Yandex Search has the largest market share of any search engine from Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, is the third largest search engine worldwide after Google and Bing,[11] and had 60% of the Russian search market as well as being the leading search and ride-sharing in Russia as of December 2021.[8]
Yandex LLC's holding company, Yandex N.V., was a naamloze vennootschap (Dutch public limited company)[12] with its head office listed at an address of a virtual office in Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport.[13] Yandex N.V. is listed on the Nasdaq as YNDX Class A ordinary shares (not an ADR and was listed on the Moscow Exchange, although trading in Yandex shares on Nasdaq was suspended in February 2022.[14]
In February 2024, Yandex N.V. announced the sale of the majority of its assets to a consortium of Russia-based investors.[15][16] In July 2024, the $5.4 billion sale was completed, giving the Kremlin more control over the business[clarification needed]. Yandex will start trading on the Moscow Exchange with the new ticker symbol YDEX as of 24 July 2024.[17]
History
[edit]Arkady Volozh and Ilya Segalovich were friends from their school days in Kazakhstan in the 1980s. Volozh started developing algorithms to search in Russian texts and contacted Segalovich in 1990.[18] They worked together to develop search software,[19] with the company name Arcadia. In 1993, they invented the name "Yandex" as an easy way to remember "Yet Another iNDEXer".[20][18] This is also a bilingual pun on "index" since "Я" ("ya") means "I" in Russian.
On September 23, 1997, the Yandex.ru search engine was launched and presented at the Softool exhibition in Moscow.[21] Arcadia became part of the software and computer part supply company, CompTek, and with Volozh as the CEO in 2000.[22]
In 1998, Yandex launched contextual advertisement on its search engine.[23] In 2000, Yandex was incorporated in Cyprus as a standalone company by Arkady Volozh.[18]
In September 2005, it opened an office in Ukraine[24] and launched www.yandex.ua.[25] In 2007, Yandex introduced a customized search engine for Ukrainian users;[26] Yandex also opened its development center in Kyiv in May 2007. In 2008, Yandex extended its presence in Ukraine by increasing bandwidth between Moscow data centers and UA-IX in Ukraine fivefold.[27] In 2009, all services of www.yandex.ua were localized for the Ukrainian market.[28] In 2010, Yandex launched its "Poltava" search engine algorithm for Ukrainian users, based on its MatrixNet technology.[29]
On June 20, 2008, it announced the formation of Yandex Labs in Silicon Valley, to foster "innovation in search and advertising technology".[30]
On 10 October 2017, Yandex introduced its voice assistant Alice. [31]
In February 2018, the deal to merge Yandex.Taxi and Uber in Russia and five neighbouring countries closed. Yandex's share in the new company, worth more than $3.8bn, was 59.3%.[32]
On 9 October 2019, the company unveiled the second smart speaker of its own design - "Yandex. Station Mini."[33]
In 2020 Yandex published its internal operating principles.[34]
There are more than 35 principles. These include: "We do not develop technology for military purposes", "We comply with the laws of each country that we operate in and try to constructively contribute to any proposed legislation that concerns technology or the market", and "The products and services that we make don't have any persuasion or political overtones."[35] For example, Yandex advertising services do not accept political ads.[36]
In September 2020, Yandex spun off the direction of unmanned cars into a separate company, Yandex Self Driving Group.[37]
On 10 March 2021, the company launched its own payment service Yandex Pay.[38]
In the first half of September 2021, the IT company's servers were subjected to the largest DDoS attack in the history of the Runet.[39]
In March 2022, executive director and deputy CEO Tigran Khudaverdyan resigned after EU sanctions.[40]
In April, CEO Elena Bunina resigned and moved to Israel.[41][42]
In June, Volozh resigned.[43]
On August 23, 2022, it was announced that Yandex is buying Delivery Club from VK in exchange for Yandex.Zen and Yandex.News.[44]
In September 2022, assets of Yandex and businessmen Boris and Arkady Rotenberg, who are close to President Vladimir Putin, were seized in Finland.[45]
In December 2022 it became known that "Yandex" registered the company Beyond ML in Armenia.[46] On December 30, Arkady Volozh announced his departure from Yandex by publishing a letter to employees on the company's internal portal.[47]
On May 17, 2023, Yandex launched its YaGPT neural network, analogous to the ChatGPT neural network.
In October 2023, Yandex Group's parent company, Yandex N.V. (Netherlands), received approval for internal restructuring from the government commission for controlling foreign investment in Russia. [48]
In July 2024, Volozh announced his return to the parts of the business retained by Yandex N.V. (Netherlands) to be named Nebius Group. (The EU lifted sanctions on Volozh in March 2024.)[17] Volozh will be CEO of Nebius, according to Reuters.[49]
Acquisitions
[edit]In March 2007, it acquired Russian social networking service moikrug.ru.;[50] on June 16, 2008, Yandex acquired SMILink, a Russian road traffic monitoring agency, to merge with Yandex.Maps services.[51] In September 2008, the company acquired the rights to the Punto Switcher software program, an automatic Russian to English keyboard layout switcher.[52]
In September 2010, it invested in a $4.3 million financing round by Face.com.[53] The company was acquired by Facebook in 2012. In December 2010, the firm launched Yandex.Start to find startups and work with them systematically, and purchased WebVisor's behavior analysis technology in December 2010.[54][55] In September 2011, it invested in Blekko as part of a $30 million financing round.[56][57] In November 2011, it acquired software developer SPB Software for $38 million.[58][59] In June 2012, it acquired a 25% stake in Seismotech, for $1 million.[60][61] On January 26, 2011, it introduced premium placement opportunity in its Business directory in which advertisers' local small businesses are highlighted.[62] On January 27, 2011, the company acquired single sign-in service Loginza.[63]
In August 2011, Yandex acquired The Tweeted Times, a news delivery startup.[64] In September 2011, it launched a search engine and a range of other services in Turkey, opening an office in Istanbul.[65]
In October 2013, the company acquired KinoPoisk, the biggest Russian movie search engine.[66][67][68] In February 2014, Yandex invested several million dollars in MultiShip.[69][70] In March 2014, it acquired Israeli geolocation startup KitLocate and opened a research and development (R&D) office in Israel.[71][72][73]
In June 2014, it acquired Auto.ru, an online marketplace and classified advertising website for automobiles, for $175 million.[74][75] In December 2015, it acquired Internet security company Agnitum .[76] On June 6, 2017, the company invested in a $5 million financing round by Doc+.[77] In December 2017, it acquired food delivery Foodfox.[78] On February 7, 2018, Uber and Yandex NV merged their businesses in Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus and Georgia. Uber invested $225 million and owns 36.6% stake in the venture while Yandex invested $100 million and owns a 59.3% stake.[79]
In May 2018, Sberbank and Yandex completed a joint venture deal to develop a B2C eCommerce ecosystem.[80] In October 2018, Yandex acquired Edadil (Russian: Едадил, lit. "grocery deals"), a deal aggregator service.[81]
In June 2021, Yandex, VTB Bank, LANIT Group and computer hardware producer Gigabyte founded a joint venture to start producing servers in Russia in 2022.[82] In October 2021, construction of a new plant in Ryazan Oblast was launched with 1 billion roubles during the first stage of investments. The new plant will produce servers, data storage systems, gateways and smart equipment under "Openyard" brand.[83] However, in June 2023 Yandex announced it was looking for ways to exit the joint venture.[84]
In January 2022, Yandex acquired "eLama", digital advertising platform, waiting for the approval from Federal Antimonopoly Service.[85] That same month Yandex has also bought "BandLink" music service.[86]
Finances
[edit]The company became profitable in November 2002. In 2004, Yandex sales increased to $17 million, up 1000% in 2 years. The net income of the company in 2004 was $7 million. In June 2006, the weekly revenue of Yandex.Direct context ads system exceeded $1 million. The company's accounting has been audited by Deloitte since 1999.[citation needed] Between 2004 and 2006, Tiger Technologies obtained an 11% ownership stake.[87]
On May 24, 2011, it raised $1.3 billion in an initial public offering on NASDAQ, the biggest initial public offering for a dot-com company since Google's offering in 2004.[88] Among the largest investors were Baring Vostok Capital Partners, which owned a 30% stake, and Tiger Technologies, which owned a 15% stake.[89][90]
In 2013, Yandex became the largest media property in Russia by revenue.[91]
In March 2022, Yandex warned shareholders about the risk of default if holders of Yandex N.V. wished to use their right to pay them off early. Before that, the trading of Yandex securities on the NASDAQ was suspended due to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine.[92] In September 2022, Yandex bought back 98.7% of issued Yandex N.V convertible bonds.[93]
In April 2022, TechCrunch reported that Yandex signed an agreement with VK holding with regard to the sale of News and Zen media services together with the main page yandex.ru[94]
In September 2022, News, Zen, and yandex.ru were transferred to a new owner.[95] At the same time ya.ru became Yandex's new main page as well as the key entry point for Search, Mail, and other non-media services.[96]
In November 2022, the board of directors of Yandex N.V. announced a possible restructuring of the company. The main part of the business would be placed into a separate group of companies that will keep the Yandex brand, which may be registered in Russia. The international parts of some businesses will be placed into separate companies under the control of Dutch Yandex N.V., which will eventually leave the shareholders of the Russian Yandex Group.[97]
In March 2023, the NASDAQ exchange announced its intention to delist Yandex and a number of other companies doing business in Russia. Yandex appealed this decision. NASDAQ granted the appeal, given the company's plans to separate the Russian and foreign businesses. The suspension of trading remains in effect.[98]
In May 2023, Yandex announced that it received applications from potential investors for the purchase of an economic share in the company. Economic investors will not be able to influence the company's activities. Voting control and management will remain with the top management of Yandex. Among the main applicants were private industrial investors Vagit Alekperov (Lukoil Founder) and Vladimir Potanin.[99]
Offices
[edit]In 2008, Yandex opened a technology and business development unit called Yandex Labs in Silicon Valley.[30] In 2011, the Istanbul office was launched together with the company's web portal in Turkey in 2011.[65]
In 2012, the company opened its first European office in Lucerne to serve advertising clients in the EU.[100] Its first research and development office in Europe started operating in Berlin in 2014.[101] In 2015, the company's Shanghai office was launched to facilitate work with Chinese companies operating on the Russian language market.[102] As of 2018 it had more than 30 offices worldwide.[10]
In December 2021 a new location in Prague was added to accommodate the company's rapidly expanding crowdsourcing, routing, cloud computing, ridesharing and weather forecasting teams.[103] As of 2021, Yandex had offices in 12 countries.[104]
Products and services
[edit]In 2001, the company launched the Yandex.Direct online advertising network.[105]
In January 2009, Mozilla Firefox 3.5 replaced Google with Yandex as the default search provider for Russian-language builds.[106]
In August 2009, the company introduced a player of free legal music in its search results.
In September 2010, Yandex launched Yandex Music, a music streaming service, with a catalogue of 800,000 tracks from 58,000 performers.[107]
On 19 May 2010, it launched an English-only web search engine.[108][109]
In March 2013, the company added an English user interface to its translation mobile app.[110]
In July 2013, Mail.Ru started placing Yandex Direct ads on its search result pages.[111]
On 10 October 2017, the company introduced its intelligent personal assistant, Alisa (Alice), for Android, iOS, and Microsoft Windows.[112][113][114]
On 28 April 2022, Yandex announced that it had sold its news and blogging products to VK.[115]
In 2022, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism said that Yandex-delivered ads promoted misinformation about the war in Ukraine which were produced by more than half a dozen Russian-language news sites.[116] Many of the articles displayed in Yandex's news aggregators were also from Russian state-owned and state-sponsored sources while the top search results about the war would sometimes prominently feature pro-war websites.[117]
Search
[edit]Games
[edit]Yandex.Games is an Internet gaming platform made by Yandex, which is available on both browser and mobile.[citation needed] As of 2022, the number of games included in the catalog exceeded 10,000,[118] with more than 11 million players a month.[119] The platform provides two types of income: advertising and in-app purchases. There is also an in-game currency called "Yans".[119]
Developers add their games to the catalog independently and edit them in the future. All games are moderated. Mandatory requirements include integration with the Yandex.Games SDK, support for HTTPS and offline Service Worker mode.[120] Game developers follow the updates of the platform in the blog, and content is provided by companies all over the world (e.g. Dutch media platform Azerion[121]).
In addition to a wide system of user ratings and reviews, the service uses complex algorithms to create personalized collections: games that have already been played, or those that are likely to be played.[122]
Technologies
[edit]On 16 February 2018, the company showed off the first tests of its autonomous cars in Moscow.[123][124]
On 5 December 2018, Yandex announced the release of their first smartphone, the Yandex.Phone.[125]
In May 2023, Yandex implemented the YandexGPT generative neural network in the virtual assistant Alice.[126]
Between 2021 and 2023, Yandex introduced automatic voice-over translation for any YouTube video in English, Chinese, French, Spanish and German.[127]
On 7 June 2023, the company launched a test of its first self-driving taxi in Moscow.[128]
Facial recognition on cameras
[edit]The Kremlin planned in 2024 to use NTechLab's software for a secret center that will collect and analyze CCTV footage from across Russia. The aim of the project is to 'identify threats in a timely manner' and 'monitor individuals for destructive and/or disloyal behavior'.[129]
Open source
[edit]In 2009, Yandex began development on its project MatrixNet. It was a unique patented algorithm for the building of machine learning models, which used one of the original gradient boosting schemes. In July 2017, the CatBoost library was released to the public. It implements the Matrixnet algorithm for the building of machine learning models.[130] At the time of release, the technology was already in use as part of a collaborative project with the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) to analyze the results of conducted particle experiments [131] CatBoost is used by foreign companies. For example: JetBrains uses it for code completion, CloudFlare for bot detection, and Careem for trip-distance determination.[132][133][134]
In 2012, Yandex began research and development within the field of natural-speech processing. And in October 2023, the company introduced Yandex SpeechKit. It is a speech-recognition and synthesis technology as well as a public API for speech recognition that Android and iOS developers can use.[135]
In 2022, the company published the source code for the YDB database management system. It is used in its own voice assistant Alice as well as in Yandex.Go and Yandex Market services.[136]
In 2023, Yandex published the source code for YTsaurus. It is a platform for work with big data.[137]
Investments
[edit]Yandex is an investor in several foreign companies. Examples include: Vizi Labs, Face.com, Blekko, and SalesPredict.[138]
Security
[edit]On June 1, 2017, Yandex closed its offices in Kyiv and Odesa, Ukraine after the Security Service of Ukraine raided the offices and accused the company of illegally collecting Ukrainian users' data and sending it to Russian security agencies.[139] The firm denied any wrongdoing. In May 2017, all Yandex services were banned in Ukraine by Presidential Decree No. 133/2017.[140]
In October and November 2018, Yandex was targeted in a cyberattack using the Regin malware, aimed at stealing technical information from its research and development unit on how users were authenticated.[141] An investigation by Kaspersky Lab attributed the hacks to Five Eyes intelligence agencies.[141]
In June 2019, RBC News reported that Yandex had refused a request by the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) under the Yarovaya law to surrender encryption keys that could decrypt the private data of its e-mail service and cloud storage users. The company argued that it was impossible to comply with the relevant law without compromising its users' privacy.[142] Maxim Akimov, Deputy Prime Minister of Russia, said that the government would take action to relieve FSB pressure on the company.[143] Alexander Zharov, head of the Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media, subsequently said that Yandex and the FSB had reached an agreement where the company would provide the required data without handing over the encryption keys.[144]
In February 2021 Yandex admitted that one of their system administrators with access rights to Yandex's email service had enabled unauthorized access, leading to almost 5,000 Yandex email inboxes being compromised.[145]
On January 25, 2023, a leaked archive with approx. 44 GB of Yandex services was shared on BreachForums via BitTorrent.[146][147]
In June 2023 Yandex was fined by the Moscow court for its repeated refusal to share user information with the Federal Security Service.[148]
News and media
[edit]In April 2014, a film about the history of Yandex called Startup was released.[149]
On 20 April 2020, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in Russia, Yandex made its home coronavirus testing service free of charge for all residents of Moscow and its surroundings, extending it to other regions in the future. Previously, it announced the launch of the service on 16 April.[150]
In late March 2022, Yandex was the subject of a Financial Times investigation that had been initiated by the nonprofit organization Me2B Alliance as part of an application auditing campaign led by researcher Zach Edwards. Edwards and four expert researchers, including Cher Scarlett, a former Apple security engineer, found that a software development kit (SDK) called AppMetrica, a product of Yandex, was harvesting data from more than 52,000 applications such as a user's device fingerprint and IP address and storing it in Russia on Yandex's servers, which they said due to Russian law, and the nature of SDKs, could be accessed by Russian authorities without their knowledge and used to identify them. Yandex said of identification by the data collected: "Although theoretically possible, in practice it is extremely hard to identify users based solely on such information collected." Of authority requests for data they said: "Any requests that fail to comply with all relevant procedural and legal requirements are turned down."[151][152]
According to Meduza investigation published on 5 May 2022, since 2016 the top-5 news on the Yandex's main page are formed on the basis of a secret list of Russian media approved by Presidential Administration of Russia, which includes only pro-Kremlin media. Yandex stated that the highest-ranked news on its main page is generated automatically through its algorithm. Because of laws around news aggregators, only news received from registered media sources may appear on it.[153]
In March 2022, Yandex began to look for ways to offload its news aggregator and blogging-recommendation platform as a result of Russia's invasion of Ukraine as well as the Kremlin's increased control of the media and freedom of expression.[154] Yandex sought to focus on something that "under no circumstances can be politicized in any way. Under the current conditions, it is impossible to continue developing content and information services that affect a large number of people."[155]
In September 2022, Yandex sold its media assets. The company transferred News, Zen, and also the main page yandex.ru to VK Holding.[154]
Statistics and finance indicators
[edit]The largest Russian Internet company in revenue. By the number of processed requests is in the top world search engines.[156]
Year | Revenue | Number of servers | Number of employees | Internet advertising market size | Competitors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | 60 million rubles | 160 | 100 | 10 million dollars | Rambler, Aport, Lycos |
2012 | 28 billion rubles | 10 thousand | 4,5 thousand | 1,7 billion dollars | Google Search, Search Mail.ru |
2019 | 175,4 billion rubles | ? | 10 092 | 3,1 billion dollars | Google, Mail.ru |
According to the analytical service "Yandex. Radar", the company's share in the Russian search market (including search on mobile devices) in the third quarter of 2020 averaged 59.3%. In the fourth quarter of 2019, on Android devices in Russia, the share of search queries to Yandex was 54.3%. The number of search queries increased by 7% compared to the same period in the fourth quarter of 2018.[158]
After the announcement on July 13, 2017 that Yandex.Taxi and Uber were merging their businesses,[167] the market capitalization of Yandex on the NASDAQ stock exchange grew to $10.73 billion, and the value of Yandex shares during day increased by 15.99% to 31.7 dollars per paper.[168]
At the end of 2019, consolidated revenue increased by 37% compared to 2018, to 175.4 billion rubles ($2,833.2 million). Revenue increased by 39% compared to 2018 (excluding Yandex. Market). The company's net profit amounted to 11.2 billion rubles ($180.9 million) and, compared to 2018, decreased by 75%.[169]
In February 2020, Russian Forbes estimated the company’s value at $14.6 billion, placing it first in the list of the most valuable companies on the Runet.
See also
[edit]References
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External links
[edit]- Media related to Yandex at Wikimedia Commons
- Business data for Yandex:
- Yandex
- 2011 initial public offerings
- Companies based in Moscow
- Companies listed on the Nasdaq
- Companies listed on the Moscow Exchange
- Companies in the MOEX
- Internet censorship in Ukraine
- Internet properties established in 1997
- Internet search engines
- Russian brands
- Web portals
- Webmail
- Online companies of the Netherlands
- Online companies of Russia
- Multinational companies headquartered in the Netherlands
- Multinational companies headquartered in Russia