Google pulling plug on radio ad service

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Google plans to stop selling advertising on broadcast radio at the end of May, in a move that could lead to up to 40 layoffs among Google's work force of 20,200 employees.

Google plans to stop selling advertising on broadcast radio at the end of May. The retreat is the latest example of how the recession is forcing the Internet search leader to reassess its ambitions beyond the online ad market.

Thursday's announcement could lead to up to 40 layoffs among Google's work force of 20,200 employees, the Mountain View, Calif.-based company said.

"We have always accepted that if you take risks not all of them will pay off," Google's vice president of product management, Susan Wojcicki, wrote on the company's blog on Thursday.

The decision to stop selling ads for broadcast radio stations comes less than a month after Google scrapped its effort to sell ads for newspapers. The company expanded into radio advertising three years ago.

Google said it still intends to place ads on television.

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