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Dot-com company



 
 
A dot-com company, or simply a dot-com (alternatively rendered dot.com or dot com), is a company that does most of its business on the Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
, usually through a website
Website

A Web site is a collection of related Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that are hosted on one Web server, usually accessible via the Internet....
 that uses the popular top-level domain
Generic top-level domain

A generic top-level domain is one of the categories of top-level domains maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority for use on the Internet....
, ".com
.com

.com is a generic top-level domain used on the Internet's Domain Name System. It was one of the original top-level domains , established in January 1985, and has grown to be the largest TLD in use....
" (in turn derived from the word "commercial").

While the term can refer to present-day companies, it is also used specifically to refer to companies with this business model that came into being during the late 1990s.






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Encyclopedia


A dot-com company, or simply a dot-com (alternatively rendered dot.com or dot com), is a company that does most of its business on the Internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
, usually through a website
Website

A Web site is a collection of related Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that are hosted on one Web server, usually accessible via the Internet....
 that uses the popular top-level domain
Generic top-level domain

A generic top-level domain is one of the categories of top-level domains maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority for use on the Internet....
, ".com
.com

.com is a generic top-level domain used on the Internet's Domain Name System. It was one of the original top-level domains , established in January 1985, and has grown to be the largest TLD in use....
" (in turn derived from the word "commercial").

While the term can refer to present-day companies, it is also used specifically to refer to companies with this business model that came into being during the late 1990s. Many such startups
Startup company

A startup company or start-up is a company with a limited operating history. These companies, generally newly created, are in a phase of development and research for markets....
 were formed to take advantage of the surplus of venture capital
Venture capital

Venture capital is a type of private equity capital typically provided to early-stage, high-potential, Growth investing companies in the interest of generating a return through an eventual realization event such as an IPO or mergers and acquisitions of the company....
 funding. Many were launched with very thin business plan
Business plan

A business plan is a formal statement of a set of business goals, the reasons why they are believed attainable, and the plan for reaching those goals....
s, sometimes with nothing more than an idea and a catchy name. The stated goal was often to "get big fast", i.e. to capture a majority share
Market share

Market share, in strategic management and marketing, is the percentage or proportion of the total available market or market segment that is being serviced by a company....
 of whatever market was being entered. The exit strategy
Exit strategy

An exit strategy is a means of escaping one's current situation, typically an unfavourable situation. An organization or individual without an exit strategy may be in a wiktionary:quagmire....
 usually included an IPO and a large payoff for the founders. Others were existing companies that re-styled themselves as Internet companies, many of them legally changing their names to incorporate a .com suffix.

With the stock market crash
Stock market crash

A stock market crash is a sudden dramatic decline of stock prices across a significant cross-section of a stock market. Crashes are driven by panic as much as by underlying economic factors....
 around the year 2000 that ended the dot-com bubble
Dot-com bubble

The "dot-com bubble" was a economic bubble covering roughly 1995?2001 during which stock markets in Western world saw their value increase rapidly from growth in the new quaternary sector of industry and related fields....
, many failed and failing dot-com companies were referred to punningly as dot-bombs, dot-cons or dot-gones. Many of the surviving firms dropped the .com suffix from their names.

The three C's


Various different ways to do business
Business

A business is a legally recognized organization designed to provide good s and/or Service to consumers. Businesses are predominant in capitalism economies, most being privately owned and formed to earn profit that will increase the wealth of its owners....
 and make money with the internet
Internet

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels. Typically, a computer that connects to the Internet can access information from a vast array of available server and other computers by moving information from them to the computer's local memory....
 have been proposed. They are emphasized in the three C’s, which stand for Commerce
Commerce

Commerce is a division of trade or production, costs, and pricing which deals with the Trade of goods and service from production, costs, and pricing to final consumer....
, Content
Content

Content or contents, is something that is contained. The term may refer to:* Content , the highest common factor of the coefficients of a polynomial...
 and Connection
Connection

Connect, connection, connected, or connectivity may refer to:In mathematics:*Connection , a way of specifying a derivative of a geometrical object along a vector field on a manifold....
. Commerce is about selling products over the internet, as Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.com, Inc. is an American electronic commerce company in Seattle, Washington. It is America's largest online retailer, with nearly three times the internet sales revenue of runner up Staples, Inc....
 does. Content refers to placing content on the internet, varying from news headlines to web-logs
Blog

A blog is a type of website, usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video....
. Some examples are BBC News
BBC News

BBC News, formerly BBC News and Current Affairs, is the department within the BBC responsible for the corporation's news-gathering and production of news programmes on BBC television, radio and online....
 and Facebook
Facebook

Facebook is a free-access social network service website that is operated and privately held company by Facebook, Inc. Users can join networks organized by city, workplace, school, and region to connect and interact with other people....
. Lastly one can do business by supplying an internet connection, as with AOL
AOL

AOL LLC is an United States global Internet services and media company operated by Time Warner and was headquartered in Loudoun County, Virginia until late April 2008 when it was moved to new offices at 770 Broadway in New York City....
, one of the largest internet service providers (ISP) in the US.

Some companies, like Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
, Microsoft
Microsoft

Microsoft Corporation is a multinational corporation computer technology corporation that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of computer software products for computing devices....
 and AOL, offer all three of them, which gives them an advantage on their competitors. This combination should be a success formula according to some information specialists.

List of well-known failed dot-coms

There are thousands of failed companies from the dot-com bubble
Dot-com bubble

The "dot-com bubble" was a economic bubble covering roughly 1995?2001 during which stock markets in Western world saw their value increase rapidly from growth in the new quaternary sector of industry and related fields....
 of the late 1990s. Here are a few of the largest and most famous.
  • 360HipHop: Promoted as 'the ultimate hip-hop destination on the web' and funded by an array of big name investors like Russell Simmons
    Russell Simmons

    Russell Simmons , is an United States entrepreneur, the co-founder, with Rick Rubin, of the pioneering Hip hop music label Def Jam, founder of another label, Russell Simmons Music Group, and creator of the clothing fashion line Phat Farm....
    , the lack of consistent content and an inability to earn more in advertising or eCommerce than they spent tanked the project. The site is now a link farm
    Link farm

    On the World Wide Web, a link farm is any group of web sites that all hyperlink to every other site in the group. Although some link farms can be created by hand, most are created through automated programs and services....
    .
  • AmCy.com: American Cybercast was the publisher of pioneering episodic sites TheSpot.com and EON4.com, with backing from Intel and Softbank. The company's collapse is documented in the book "Digital Babylon: How the Geeks, the Suits, and the Ponytails Fought to Bring Hollywood to the Internet."
  • boo.com
    Boo.com

    Boo.com was a United Kingdom Internet company founded by Swedes Ernst Malmsten, Kajsa Leander and Patrik Hedelin that famously went bust following the dot-com boom of the late 1990s....
  • Broadband Sports
    Broadband Sports

    Broadband Sports is a social media and video sharing website focused on extreme sports. The Broadbandsports.com domain and "Broadband Sports" name was orginally founded in 1998, later becoming a high-flying dot-com company-era network of sports-content Web sites that raised over $60 million before shutting down in February 2001....
    : A network of sports-content Web sites that raised over $60 million before going bust in February 2001.
  • Cyberian Outpost
    Cyberian Outpost

    Cyberian Outpost was an online vendor of discount computer hardware and software, and was one of the first successful online retailers. CybOut was founded in 1994 by Darryl Peck and announced its IPO in 1998 ....
    : Founded in 1994 and one of the first successful online retailers. Controversial marketing campaigns. Acquired by Fry's Electronics
    Fry's Electronics

    Fry's Electronics is a specialty retailer of software, consumer electronics, computer hardware and household appliances with a chain of superstores headquartered in Silicon Valley....
     in 2001.
  • CyberRebate: Promised customers a 100% rebate after purchasing products priced at nearly ten times the retail cost. Went bankrupt in 2002, leaving thousands of customers holding the bag. The bankruptcy was settled in 2005 and customers received about eight cents on the dollar from their original rebates.
  • DigiScents: Tried to transmit smells over the internet.
  • E-Loft.com: A paneuropean portal for university students, covering Italy, Germany, UK, Spain and France.
  • Excite@Home
    Excite

    Excite is an Internet Web portal, and as one of the "Dot-com companys" of the 1990s , it was once one of the most recognized brands on the Internet....
    : Excite, a pioneering Internet portal, merged with high-speed Internet service @Home in 1999 to become Excite@Home, promising to be the "AOL of Broadband" and partnering with cable operators to become the largest broadband ISP
    Internet service provider

    An Internet service provider is a company that offers its customers access to the Internet. The ISP connects to its customers using a data transmission technology appropriate for delivering Internet Protocol datagrams, such as dial-up, DSL, cable modem or dedicated high-speed interconnects....
     in the United States. After spending billions on acquisitions and trying unsuccessfully to sell the Excite portal during a sharp downturn in online advertising, the company filed for bankruptcy in September 2001 and shut down operations.
  • Flooz.com
    Flooz.com

    Flooz.com was a dot-com venture, now defunct, based in New York City that went online in February 1999, promoted by comic actress Whoopi Goldberg in a series of television advertisements....
    : a service touted as "e-currency" launched at the height of the dot com boom in the late 90s and subsequently folded in 2001 due to lack of consumer acceptance and a basic lack of necessity. Famous for having Whoopi Goldberg
    Whoopi Goldberg

    Whoopi Goldberg is an United Statesn actress, comedian, singer-songwriter and media personality.She is one of only a handful of List of persons who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards....
     as their spokesperson.
  • Kozmo.com
    Kozmo.com

    Kozmo.com was a venture-capital-driven online company that promised free one-hour delivery of anything from DVD rentals to Starbucks coffee in the United States....
    : delivered small goods (like a pint of ice cream) via messenger courier in under an hour to anyone in their service area. They charged normal retail rates and did not charge a delivery fee. They thought they could make up the difference by avoiding the expense of a retail storefront and on volume.
  • theGlobe.com
    TheGlobe.com

    theGlobe.com was an startup founded in 1994 by Cornell University students Stephan Paternot and Todd Krizelman. A social networking service, theGlobe.com made headlines by going public on November 13, 1998 and posting the largest first day gain of any Initial Public Offering in history up to that date....
    : Broke the record as the company having the largest percentage change in its stock price on its first day of trading. CEO Stephan Paternot was famously filmed dancing in a Manhattan nightclub wearing plastic pants. Limped along in various forms until an anti-spam lawsuit forced its closure in 2007.
  • Kibu.com: Online community for teen girls, founded in 1999 and backed, among others, by Jim Clark
    James H. Clark

    Dr. James H. Clark is a prolific entrepreneur and former computer scientist. He founded several notable Silicon Valley technology companies, including Silicon Graphics, Inc., Netscape Communications Corporation, myCFO and Healtheon....
    . Although traffic to its website had begun to materialize, kibu.com abruptly closed its doors 46 days after a launch party in San Francisco, in October 2000. It had not run out of its $22 million in venture capital, but company officials concluded, "Kibu's timing in financial markets could not have been worse."
  • Pseudo.com
    Pseudo.com

    Pseudo.com was an United States internet website for live audio and video webcasting. Founded in late 1993, its parent company Pseudo Programs Inc....
    : One of the first live streaming video websites. Pseudo produced its own content in a SoHo, NYC studio and streamed up to 7 hours of live programing a day from its website in a format divided into channels by topic.
  • Yadayada.com: Founded in 1999; Internet browser and portal technologies for the first generation of wireless PalmPilot
    PalmPilot

    The PalmPilot Personal and PalmPilot Professional are the second generation of Palm Personal digital assistant devices produced by Palm Inc ....
     and Handspring
    Handspring (company)

    Handspring was a maker of Palm OS-based Visor- and Treo-branded personal digital assistants. It was run by Jeff Hawkins, Donna Dubinsky, and Ed Colligan, the original inventors of the Palm Pilot and founders of Palm, Inc., after they became unhappy with the direction in which 3Com was taking the Palm division....
     organizers, and Kyocera
    Kyocera

    is a Japanese company based in Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan. The company was founded as in 1959 by Kazuo Inamori. It manufactures ceramics and printing-related devices, as well as a comprehensive line of imaging products....
     smartphone
    Smartphone

    A smartphone is a mobile phone offering advanced capabilities beyond a typical mobile phone, often with personal computer-like functionality. There is no industry standard definition of a smartphone....
     devices, competing with OmniSky (also defunct) and AvantGo
    AvantGo

    AvantGo is a Web page / file synchronization service for personal digital assistants and smartphones. The system consists of browser client software running on the PDA, a synchronization server, and an Internet-connected PC to transfer Web pages into the PDA....
    . The name of the company came from a Hindu phrase (its CEO was Hindu), and not as was widely reported from the similar phrase "Yada yada yada" made famous by a Seinfeld
    Seinfeld

    Seinfeld is an Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award-winning Television in the United States Situation comedy that originally aired on NBC from July 5, 1989, to May 14, 1998, lasting nine seasons, and is now in Broadcast syndication....
     episode (although the similarity certainly helped marketing). The business plan specified 12x as many sales as actually occurred in the first 12 months of operations. The cheap plastic, easily breakable HandSpring devices, sold directly by YadaYada via a reseller agreement, accounted for 96% of support calls vs. the magnesium cased Palm devices, despite the latter's market predominance at the time, and the resulting consumer discontent resulted in many returns and canceled contracts. The company's CEO was also CFO and embarked without oversight on disastrous, expensive marketing campaigns, such as planned Super Bowl ads without basics like a target market. 90%+ of all sales were within the Manhattan area, and the 3GL networks needed to expand the service failed to materialize after the telecom market meltdown in 2000–2001. The most-hyped feature of the service was a public bathroom rank-and-search service, available in Manhattan only, which allowed users to rank bathrooms by several factors such as cleanliness, appointment, etc., and provided directions to such bathrooms based on the user's location. The company laid off practically all workers in 2001, and shutdown formally shortly afterwards. Its CEO was rumored to have fled to Canada to avoid the IRS and lawsuits filed by a few disgruntled employees who were terminated with no severance despite existing written employment contracts. The URL is now in use by another, unrelated company.
  • Zap.com: an internet media venture founded by Zapata Corporation
    Zapata Corporation

    Zapata Corporation is a holding company based in Rochester, New York and originating from an petroleum company started by a group including the former United States President of the United States George H....
    , a fish protein company intent on monetizing its domain name
    Domain name

    The term domain name has multiple related meanings:* A hostname that identifies a computer or computers on the Internet. These names appear as a component of a Web site's Uniform Resource Locator, e.g....
    .


CNET.com

Acquisitions

Acquisition Bought by Price Date
Hotmail Microsoft
Microsoft

Microsoft Corporation is a multinational corporation computer technology corporation that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of computer software products for computing devices....
 
$400,000,000 December 1997
Internet Movie Database
Internet Movie Database

The Internet Movie Database is an online database of information related to film, actors, Television program, production crew personnel, video games, and most recently, fictional characters featured in visual entertainment media....
 
Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.com, Inc. is an American electronic commerce company in Seattle, Washington. It is America's largest online retailer, with nearly three times the internet sales revenue of runner up Staples, Inc....
 
1998
Viaweb
Viaweb

Viaweb is a web application that allows users to build and web hosting their own online stores with little effort and technical expertise, directly from their own web browser....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$49,000,000 June 8 1998
Netscape Communications AOL
AOL

AOL LLC is an United States global Internet services and media company operated by Time Warner and was headquartered in Loudoun County, Virginia until late April 2008 when it was moved to new offices at 770 Broadway in New York City....
 
$4,200,000,000 24 November 1998
GeoCities
GeoCities

Yahoo! GeoCities is a web hosting service founded by David Bohnett and John Rezner in late 1994 as Beverly Hills Internet .In its original form, site users selected a "city" in which to place their web pages....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$3,570,000,000 January 28 1999
Broadcast.com
Broadcast.com

Broadcast.com was a web radio company founded as "AudioNet" in September 1995 by Chris Jaeb. Todd Wagner and Mark Cuban later led the organization to hugely capitalize on the dot-com bubble and be sold to Yahoo.com....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$5,700,000,000 April 1 1999
Thawte
Thawte

Thawte Consulting is a certificate authority for X.509 certificates. Thawte, , was founded in 1995 by Mark Shuttleworth in South Africa and is the second largest public CA on the Internet....
 
VeriSign
VeriSign

VeriSign, Inc. is an United States company based in Mountain View, California that operates a diverse array of network infrastructure, including two of the Internet's thirteen root nameservers, the generic top-level domains for .com and .net, one of the largest Signaling System 7 signaling networks in North America, and the RFID directory fo...
 
$575,000,000 December 1999
Network Solutions
Network Solutions

Network Solutions, LLC is a technology company which was founded in 1979. The Domain name registry business has become the most important division of the company....
 
VeriSign
VeriSign

VeriSign, Inc. is an United States company based in Mountain View, California that operates a diverse array of network infrastructure, including two of the Internet's thirteen root nameservers, the generic top-level domains for .com and .net, one of the largest Signaling System 7 signaling networks in North America, and the RFID directory fo...
 
$21,000,000,000 2000
eGroups
EGroups

eGroups.com was an electronic mailing list management web site. The site allowed users to create their own mailing lists and allowed others to sign up for membership on the list....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$432,000,000 June 28 2000
AllBusiness.com
AllBusiness.com

AllBusiness.com, a wholly owned subsidiary of Dun & Bradstreet, provides business information and resources for small businesses, those companies with fewer than 500 employees....
 
NBCi
NBC

The National Broadcasting Company is an American television network headquartered in the GE Building in New York City Rockefeller Center. It is sometimes referred to as the Peacock Network due to its stylized peacock logo....
 
$225,000,000 March 2000
HotJobs Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
December 27 2001
CDNow
CDNOW

CDNOW.com was among the first successful global online retailers. The company was founded in February 1994 by twin brothers Jason Olim and Matthew Olim of Ambler, Pennsylvania....
 
Amazon
Amazon

Amazon or Amazons may refer to:* Amazons, members of a legendary nation of female warriors in Greek mythology** Dahomey Amazons, an all-female regiment of the African kingdom of Dahomey...
 
2001
PayPal
PayPal

PayPal is an e-commerce business allowing payments and money transfers to be made through the Internet. PayPal serves as an electronic alternative to traditional paper methods such as Cheque and money orders....
 
eBay
EBay

eBay Inc. is an United States Internet company that manages eBay.com, an online auction and shopping website in which people and businesses buy and sell goods and services worldwide....
 
$1,500,000,000 October 3 2002
Inktomi
Inktomi

Inktomi Corporation was a California company that provided software for Internet service providers. It was founded in 1996 by UC Berkeley professor Eric Brewer and graduate student Paul Gauthier ....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$235,000,000 March 2003
Pyra Labs
Pyra Labs

Pyra Labs is the company that coined the word Blogger, and made the Blogger a big success.The co-founders were Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan, and the company's first product, also named 'Pyra', was a web application which would combine a project manager, contact manager, and to-do list....
 
Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
2003
Overture Services, Inc.
Yahoo! Search Marketing

Yahoo! Search Marketing is a keyword-based "Pay per click" or "Search engine marketing" Internet advertising service provided by Yahoo!.Yahoo began offering this service after acquiring Overture Services, Inc. ....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$1,700,000,000 July 2003
Keyhole Inc.
Google Earth

Google Earth is a virtual globe, map and geographic information program that was originally called Earth Viewer, and was created by Keyhole, Inc, a company acquired by Google in 2004....
 
Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
2004
Kelkoo
Kelkoo

The website Kelkoo is a European price comparison service founded in France in 1999. It was bought by Yahoo! in 2004. It operates in 10 countries, including UK, France, Spain, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, and Belgium....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
March 25 2004
Picasa
Picasa

Picasa is a software application for organizing and editing digital photographys, originally created by Idealab and owned by Google since 2004. "Picasa" is a blend of the name of Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, the phrase mi casa for "my house" and "pic" for pictures . In July 2004, Google acquired Picasa and began offering...
 
Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
July 2004
Oddpost.com Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
July 9 2004
Lycos
Lycos

Lycos is a Web search engine and web portal with broadband entertainment content....
 
Daum
Daum

Daum is a popular web portal in South Korea, with its rival Naver . Daum offers many Internet services to web users, including a popular free web-based e-mail, instant messaging service, Internet Forums, internet shopping and news....
 
$95,400,000 August 2 2004
Upcoming.org
Upcoming.org

Upcoming is a social event calendar website that launched in 2003, founded by Andy Baio . On October 4, 2005, Upcoming.org was acquired by Yahoo!....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
October 5 2005
Skype
Skype

Skype is software that allows users to make voice over Internet Protocol. Calls to other users of the service and to free-of-charge numbers are free, while calls to other landlines and mobile phones can be made for a fee....
 
eBay
EBay

eBay Inc. is an United States Internet company that manages eBay.com, an online auction and shopping website in which people and businesses buy and sell goods and services worldwide....
 
$2,600,000,000 October 14 2005
Ask.com
Ask.com

Ask.com is a web search engine started in 1996 by Garrett Gruener and David Warthen in Berkeley, California. The original software was implemented by Gary Chevsky from his own design....
 
IAC/InterActiveCorp
IAC/InterActiveCorp

IAC, sometimes known as IAC/InterActiveCorp or simply InterActiveCorp, is an American media conglomerate which operates diversified businesses in sectors being strongly influenced by the internet....
 
$1,850,000,000 March 2005
TheHomeBuyingCenter.com Internet Leads Systems $20,000,000 2007
DialPad Communications
Dialpad

Dialpad Communications was an early pioneer in the Voice over IP industry that was founded in 1999 after spinning out from Serome Technologies in Seoul and moving to Santa Clara, California in the United States....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
June 14 2005
MySpace
MySpace

MySpace is a social network service website with an interactive, user-submitted network of friends, personal profiles, blogs, groups, photos, music, and videos for teenagers and adults internationally....
 
News Corporation
News Corporation

News Corporation , , ) is one of the world's largest Media conglomerate conglomerates. The company's Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Founder is Rupert Murdoch and the President and Chief Operating Officer is Peter Chernin....
 
$580,000,000 July 2005
Konfabulator Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
July 25 2005
dodgeball Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
May 2005
Provide Commerce Liberty Media
Liberty Media

The Liberty Media Corporation is an United States media conglomerate and the control is exercised by engineer Dr. John C. Malone, with a majority of the voting shares....
 
$477,000,000 December 5 2005
Friends Reunited
Friends Reunited

Friends Reunited is a portfolio of social networking websites based upon the themes of reunion with research , dating and job-hunting. The first and eponymous website was created by a husband and wife team in the classic back bedroom internet start-up; it was the first online social network to achieve prominence in Britain, and it weathered t...
 
ITV plc
ITV plc

ITV plc is a United Kingdom media company that operates 11 of the 15 regional television broadcasters that make up the ITV, the oldest and largest commercial terrestrial television network in the United Kingdom....
 
$230,000,000 December 6 2005
del.icio.us
Del.icio.us

Delicious is a social bookmarking web service for storing, sharing, and discovering World Wide Web Bookmark . The site was founded by Joshua Schachter in 2003 and acquired by Yahoo! in 2005....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
$15,000,000 December 9 2005
Webjay
Webjay

History Webjay was a web-based playlist service launched in early 2004. Playlists consisted of links to Vorbis, MP3, Windows Media Audio, RealAudio and/or other audio files on the web....
 
Yahoo!
Yahoo!

Yahoo! Inc. is an United States public company corporation with headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, , and provides Internet services worldwide....
 
January 9 2006
Shopbop Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.com, Inc. is an American electronic commerce company in Seattle, Washington. It is America's largest online retailer, with nearly three times the internet sales revenue of runner up Staples, Inc....
 
February 27 2006
SketchUp
SketchUp

SketchUp is a 3D modeling computer program designed for architects, civil engineers, filmmakers, game developers, and related professions. It also includes features to facilitate the placement of models in Google Earth....
 
Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
March 14 2006
Writely Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
March 9 2006
BuyCostumes.com Liberty Media
Liberty Media

The Liberty Media Corporation is an United States media conglomerate and the control is exercised by engineer Dr. John C. Malone, with a majority of the voting shares....
 
$55,000,000 July 26 2006
YouTube
YouTube

YouTube is a Video hosting service website where users can upload, view and share video clips. Three former PayPal employees created YouTube in February 2005....
 
Google
Google

Google Inc. is an United States public company, earning revenue from AdWords related to its Google search, Gmail, Google Maps, Google Apps, Orkut, and YouTube services as well as selling advertising-free versions of the Google Search Appliance....
 
$1,650,000,000 November 13 2006
WebEx
WebEx

WebEx Communications Inc. is a Cisco Systems company that provides on-demand collaboration, online meeting, web conferencing and video conferencing applications....
 
Cisco
Cisco

Cisco may refer to:Companies:* Cisco Systems, a computer networking company* Certis CISCO, corporatised entity of the former Commercial and Industrial Security Corporation in Singapore....
 
$3,200,000,000 March 15 2007
Backcountry.com
Backcountry.com

Backcountry.com is a top 50 online retailer specializing in high-end outdoor recreation gear for skiing, snowboarding, rock climbing, kayaking, hiking, trekking, trail running, snowshoeing, and now cycling....
 
Liberty Media
Liberty Media

The Liberty Media Corporation is an United States media conglomerate and the control is exercised by engineer Dr. John C. Malone, with a majority of the voting shares....
 
May 8 2007
Last.fm
Last.fm

Last.fm is a United Kingdom-based Internet radio and music community website, founded in 2002. It claims over 21 million active users based in more than 200 countries....
 
CBS
CBS

CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
 
$280,000,000 May 30 2007
RateYourMechanics.com Kevin Harris Acquisitions LLC $2,800,000 August 30 2007
Bodybuilding.com
Bodybuilding.com

Bodybuilding.com is an online retailer/manufacturer of sports supplements and nutritional products. Bodybuilding.com was founded in 1999 in Boise, Idaho by then 21-year old CEO Ryan R....
 
Liberty Media
Liberty Media

The Liberty Media Corporation is an United States media conglomerate and the control is exercised by engineer Dr. John C. Malone, with a majority of the voting shares....
 
$100,000,000 January 6 2008
CNET Networks CBS
CBS

CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
 
$1,800,000,000 May 15 2008