End Of An Era: Yahoo Finally Killing Off Geocities
from the bye-bye dept
Just last night, I got into a conversation with someone about the rise and fall of various social networking sites. The key point was that they all seem to come and go -- and we were noting how MySpace and Facebook were following that trend. I brought up that it was the same thing that had happened in the past with SixDegrees and Friendster as well... when the guy I was talking to pointed out that I shouldn't forget GeoCities. In many ways, GeoCities was the original social network. It's where I got my very first website way back in 1996 or so (when the company was still called Beverly Hills Internet, and the service was GeoPages, not GeoCities). I learned HTML in order to figure out how to set up and manage my site on GeoPages (now long gone, of course). In 1999, Yahoo bought GeoCities for a bit less than $3 billion -- and, as big companies are known to do with hot startups -- did pretty much nothing with it (other than quickly laying off most of the employees and pissing off users).I actually knew the site was still operating, because just a month or so ago, I came across the GeoCities site of a friend of mine who had first convinced me to use GeoCities -- and his page was still up, looking pretty much the same as it did in 1996. However, Yahoo has now announced that it will be shutting down GeoCities as part of its ongoing effort to consolidate and concentrate. Still, as Rich Skrenta points out, it's rather ridiculous to just shut down a property that gets 11 million unique visitors per month. Rich is offering to simply take over the site for Yahoo, promising to give them back 50% of any revenue. I wonder if others would want the same. Could you imagine a bidding war for GeoCities in 2009?
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Filed Under: geocities, social networks
Companies: yahoo
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Don't Forget About Angelfire
Don't understand killing Geocities either, but maybe there are extra costs to serving up that many pages. Would be interesting to see a list of sites that Yahoo! overpaid for (ahem broadcast.com) to get a sense of how much they wasted on buying other people's first mover advantage.
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Re: Don't Forget About Angelfire
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'd guess that most of the content is better served nowadays by blogs/Twitter/Facebook/whatever and only those of us with fond memories of it being the biggest game in town will even notice it's gone.
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Thank you, GeoCities. Go with God.
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Re: Don't Forget About Angelfire
Because there are much better, easier, and technologically richer alternatives? You can actually get a free domain name with your free web space with many web service providers, and with up-to-date flash, java, php, & data base technology. FOR FREE. Just google "free web space" some time. Some are undoubtedly malware infectors, but not all of 'em.
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Re: Re: Don't Forget About Angelfire
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THERE was a time...
I remember that practically every website that WASN'T a company -- and some that were -- was a geocities site. I, too, still see a few of those addies around, but most people are on sites like blogspot, etc.
For those of us who've been around for the entire lifetime of the internet, losing geocities is a bit like losing your great grampa: you hate to lose him, but you always knew his time was coming.
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That sucks
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GOOD RIDDANCE!!
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Oh No!
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So...
In fact, why not offer to donate the domain to Archive.org and let them keep the pages "live"? Better that creating millions of dead links overnight, especially to Geocities "reference" pages that nobody has ever seen the need to improve on.
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Lots of lost memories
Hopefully someplace like Archive.org will have a chance to cache all of those pages, or people will be able to find places to move their site to easily, lock, stock and barrel.
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Re: Lots of lost memories
or should I say :-?
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Cheer up, bucko, but the long road to recovery is rocky and sad.
Yes, things will eventually get better, just be sure to carry some tissue over the next year in case fond memories return and cause (sniff, sniff) an uncontrollable urge to reminisce...
Oh god... Xoom, why did you have to leave us? Please come back. (tears) For the children.
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I'll sending it off while playing a Collective Soul song slightly rewritten. I though this was the best song for the first social networking site.
The Webs now divides
To bring you back into the fold
Welcome home
Still my need to recognize
Any comfort you may show
Only grows (slower)
Guess I'll learn to accommodate
While my browser just sits and waits
Maybe Twitter you found
Maybe is all that you can offer now
Where am I to take refuge
When the video swarms of P2P release
Shelter me
This costlyness of Second life
Sometimes brings me to my knees
I call on thee
I have not the words to write
A Farewell to you tonight
Maybe Twitter you found
Maybe is all that you can offer now
I know geeks are weeping
While your voice is now singing
On high, angelfire on high
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Burn a ghetto to sell a condo?
Everything on Geocities calls back to a simpler time, but yahoo never took the system any father then when it begain. They became so sold on selling full "site" packeges that they did not and fully use the advantage of geocities in connecting it to User's profiles. It could of been the alternative to Blogger, (as many would conclude that is what many original Geocities pages where used for), and made Yahoo worth something again.
As it is now though, even though people are saying that nothing of value was lost, the truth is that this is a very dick move by Yahoo to close their free service and only offer their lack-lustering paid services as an alternative.
Congrats Yahoo, you continue to portray yourself as a the clique mega-corp that's completely disconnected with reality. (Without the money or influence of a mega-corp).
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Re: Cheer up, bucko, but the long road to recovery is rocky and sad.
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Geocities will be missed by many
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Geocities and Free-Host sites gone
http://www.fortunecity.com (subdomains expired)
http://www.geocities.com (subdomains expired)
http://www.hostultra.com (subdomains expired)
http://www.cjb.net (subdomains expired)
Have died about 5 years ago
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