The Scan: Kayak faces risks, Lufthansa wins in court, Qantas falters, and more travel news

BusinessWeek assesses the risks for Kayak, Lufthansa wins a US federal court judgment over its WiFi technology, Qantas posts its first loss in 17 years, and more items in our roundup of the stories that are making news and driving opinion on 23 August.

kayak google ita software Steve Hafner KYAK $KAYK
Kayak’s IPO was a success, says BusinessWeek

But Google may still destroy the company. Yes, Kayak’s financials remain strong. But the magazine notes:

Kayak’s current agreement with ITA concludes at the end of 2013, and while a continued relationship is likely, there are no guarantees that Kayak’s business won’t suffer as the result of a new deal.”

Lufthansa wins a ruling in US court over its WiFi tech
Lufthansa had sought a ruling from a federal court in the Eastern District of Virginia to set out who owns the underlying Internet technology it paid for when it hired a company, True Path, to collaborate on improving the airline’s Internet service.

Yesterday, the court ruled in favor of Lufthansa’s lawyers’ interpretation of the contracts allowing it to proceed. (The ruling’s here.)

A dispute between True Path and another company, Wi-Sky, over who owned the rights to the ground-to-air wireless technology had held up Lufthansa’s development of a faster in-flight WiFi service since 2010.

Qantas stumbles: Here’s an unusually smart and brief explanation of the airline’s financial trouble:

A transcript and MP3 from this morning’s broadcast of ABC’s the World Today, via Sydney. It provides context for why Qantas had its first annual loss in at least 17 years and why geography and government regulation is stifling it.

“How Well Will ‘Google Now’ Get You Around? So Far, Not Very”

That’s the verdict of Rob Pegoraro, respected WaPo tech journalist, writing for Atlantic Cities.

Airports get into the travel content business

Iceland’s Keflavik Airport’s new website has added Swedish company ArrivalGuides’ InspireMe widget, offering travel guides in pdf format for more than 400 destinations. Its one of several airports interested in destination content solutions.

NB: Image courtesy Kayak.

Related posts:

  1. Lufthansa, JetBlue leave no paper trail with corporate-travel tool
  2. Lufthansa Systems gets a new CEO but challenges remain
  3. Lufthansa tests Amadeus Affinity Shopper on Russia site
Sean O'Neill About Sean O'Neill

Sean O’Neill is a UK-based reporter for Tnooz.

Since university, he's been a full-time journalist for US consumer magazines and websites, and since 2007 he has covered B2C travel news full-time.

He lives in London and is travel tech columnist for BBC Travel. He used to work in New York City as the online senior editor for Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel.

In the past, O'Neill held editor, writer, and reporter positions at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance and Foreign Policy magazines in Washington, DC. Please visit his personal site and follow him on Twitter or Google+ .

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