A woman holds her malnourished child at a therapeutic feeding center at al-Sabyeen hospital in Sanaa May 28, 2012. REUTERS/Mohamed al-Sayaghi

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Blogs clash over whether Google could buy Twitter

1 of 2. Google employees watch as U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Britain's Foreign Secretary David Miliband talk to reporters at the Google Inc. headquarters in Mountain View, California May 22, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

NEW YORK | Fri Apr 3, 2009 5:01pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Two prominent technology news blogs clashed on Friday morning over a report one of them issued that said Google Inc may try to buy Internet start-up Twitter.

TechCrunch proprietor Michael Arrington, citing three unnamed sources, said on Thursday night that Google would pay for Twitter in cash, stock or a combination of the two.

The companies are also considering working together on a Google real-time search engine, he wrote.

Hours after Arrington's blog entry, Kara Swisher reported on her Boomtown blog said the story was inaccurate, citing "a number of sources."

"In fact, Twitter and Google have simply been engaged in 'some product-related discussions,' according to one source," Swisher wrote.

Arrington could not be immediately reached for comment. TechCrunch stands by its story, said Robin Wauters, a blogger for the site who answered an e-mail directed at Arrington.

Twitter is a service that allows people to send short text messages to a network of friends. Its popularity is growing, particularly among journalists looking for new ways to get people to read their news and commentary.

The San Francisco, California-based company has yet to make any money. That has not stopped the technology world from speculating on who will scoop up the company, though co-founder Biz Stone told Reuters in March that it is not considering a merger or a buyout.

A Google spokeswoman declined to comment. Twitter could not be reached for comment.

Boomtown is a blog on the website All Things Digital, which is owned by Wall Street Journal Dow Jones & Co. That company, in turn, is owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

(Reporting by Robert MacMillan in New York and Vikram S Subhedar in Bangalore)

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