Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang is leaving the struggling internet company, as it tries to revive its revenue growth and win over disgruntled shareholders under a new leader. The departure, announced on Tuesday, marks the end of an era at Yahoo, a tarnished internet icon that has spent much of the last decade scrambling to catch up to internet search leader Google — a company that got early encouragement and advice from Yang. It comes just two weeks after Yahoo hired former PayPal executive Scott Thompson as its CEO. Thompson is the fourth CEO in less than five years to try to turn around Yahoo. It\'s a daunting assignment that Yang was unable to pull off during his own tumultuous 18-month reign as the company\'s CEO in 2007 and 2008. Yang, 43, endorsed Thompson in his resignation from Yahoo\'s board of directors. He had been on Yahoo\'s board since the company\'s 1995 inception. ‘Exciting and rewarding\' \"My time at Yahoo, from its founding to the present, has encompassed some of the most exciting and rewarding experiences of my life,\" Yang wrote in a letter to Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock. \"However, the time has come for me to pursue other interests outside of Yahoo.\" The letter didn\'t say what Yang plans to do next. He doesn\'t need to work, thanks to the fortune he has amassed since he began working on Yahoo in a trailer at Stanford University with fellow graduate student David Filo. Yang is worth about $1.1 billion (Dh4.04 billion), according to Forbes magazine\'s latest estimates. Yang is also stepping down from the boards of China\'s Alibaba Group and Yahoo Japan. Yahoo is negotiating to sell its stakes in both of the Asian companies as part of its efforts to placate investors. The deal could be worth as much as $17 billion.