Dagens Næringsliv reports on the history of Von Tetzchner’s relationship with the publicly traded browser company:
Von Tetzchner resigned as chief executive Opera in 2010 after disagreements over strategy of the company, and last summer he was completely out of the company after he resigned as a strategic advisor. Since then, a number of key people from von Tetzchner reign have withdrawn. In late December 2011 ceased development director Christen Krogh , who took with him including former Chief Strategy Officer Rolf Assev.
In May the rumor mill was churning out noise that Facebook was eying Opera for a potential acquisition. Opera has been innovating in the mobile browser front, which could cut browsing costs for users on mobile devices.
Such a strategy would make sense in emerging markets, where many internet users connect exclusively through their mobile phones. Lithuanian-based Eskimi is killing it in Nigeria, for example, for offering a lightweight social network without the boat of Facebook’s app.
Will this add more fuel to the rumor mill? Last May feels like 2 years ago in tech news terms. Who knows if the timing is still right for Facebook, or if other companies are interested, but this lack of a controlling stake paves the way for a potential buyout in the future.