With Verizon moving ahead with its purchase of Yahoo, the telecom giant is thinking ahead to a broader rebranding of its new internet properties, including AOL.
Once the Yahoo deal closes, AOL and Yahoo will be known as Oath - or more formally, "Oath: A Verizon Company", as a tweet on Monday from AOL chief executive Tim Armstrong attests.
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The Silicon Valley pioneer also said CEO Marissa Mayer and some other directors will leave the board after it closes its deal with Verizon.
He wrote," Billion+ Consumers, 20+ Brands, Unstoppable Team. #TakeTheOath. Summer 2017".
Billion+ Consumers, 20+ Brands, Unstoppable Team. #TakeTheOath. Summer 2017. pic.twitter.com/tM3Ac1Wi36
— Tim Armstrong (@timarmstrongaol) April 3, 2017
The new name, which was first reported by Business Insider, promptly received some ribbing on social media.
Many greeted the announcement with bewilderment, with some suggesting that Oath sounded like the name of a heavy metal band.
#oath to be renamed and rebranded as Why!Yahoo@why!com
— Ian Nelson (@talkbackny) April 3, 2017
@Yahoo and @AOL to combine under new name #Oath. And I was here thinking that was an April Fools thing but nah 🙃
— Kunal Kerai (@KunalKerai) April 3, 2017
![Judging by AOL CEO Tim Armstrong's tweet, which points to "20+ brands", it appears that many of the individual services ...](/web/20170405083521im_/http://www.smh.com.au/content/dam/images/g/v/d/1/7/i/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gvd0so.png/1491306641082.jpg)
#Oath is the name of terrible local skinhead band
— superchunk (@superchunk) April 3, 2017
Others compared it to Tronc, last year's largely panned rebrand of Tribune Publishing, the company behind The Chicago Tribune, The Los Angeles Times and several other major daily newspapers.
TechCrunch, the Silicon Valley news site, summed up the general confusion in the headline of a post about the announcement: "Yahoo + AOL = Oath, for some reason," it read.
Yahoo + AOL = Oath, for some reason https://t.co/nXG8a0fo8M by @bheater
— TechCrunch (@TechCrunch) April 3, 2017
But for Verizon, the acquisition is no laughing matter.
It bought AOL in part to take advantage of its advertising technology, which will become all the more valuable when Verizon can use it to sell increasingly targeted ads against Yahoo's content.
Judging by Armstrong's tweet, which points to "20+ brands", it appears that many of the individual services and features that consumers currently associate with Yahoo and AOL properties, such as the Huffington Post or Yahoo Sports, will not be going away.
Verizon bought AOL in 2015 for $US4.4 billion, and announced it would pay $US4.8 billion for Yahoo a year later.
But before long, revelations about multiple historic data breaches at Yahoo called the fate of the deal into question, and Verizon ultimately settled on a new agreement in February to buy Yahoo for $US4.45 billion.
Yahoo declined to comment. Verizon didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Washington Post and New York Times