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LiveJournal (Russian: Живой Журнал), [3] stylised as LiVEJOURNAL, is a Russian-owned social networking service where users can keep a blog, journal, or diary. [4] American programmer Brad Fitzpatrick started LiveJournal on April 15, 1999, as a way of keeping his high school friends updated on his activities. [ 5 ]
LiveJournal grew out of a journaling program Fitzpatrick wrote for himself as a college freshman. [2] [1] It eventually became a full-time job and then a company; in January 2005 he sold it and its parent company, Danga Interactive, to Six Apart, for an undisclosed sum of cash and stock. [2] [1] [3] He was named chief architect of Six Apart. [4]
Oh No They Didn't, also known as ONTD, is the largest community on LiveJournal with over 100,000 members. [1] The community focuses on celebrity gossip and pop culture with most of its posts aggregated from other gossip blogs. The site formed a partnership with pop culture blog network Buzz Media in July 2010 that was not renewed a year later. [2]
Again Six Apart makes an "offline" page visible through the entire LiveJournal network. August 2, 2007 - LiveJournal users are banned without notice for depicting art "depicting minors in explicit sexual situations". Outraged users spam and protest until LiveJournal addresses the deletion on August 7. October 11, 2007 - Site reaches 14 million ...
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Dreamwidth is an online journal service based on the LiveJournal codebase.It is a code fork of the original service, set up by ex-LiveJournal staff [1] Denise Paolucci and Mark Smith, born out of a desire for a new community based on open access, transparency, freedom and respect.
In 2003, Galkovsky started a Livejournal blog, covering wide range of topics in history, culture and politics. His blog has gained recognition in the Russian blogosphere and regularly appears on various lists of the most popular blogs.
Donald Scott Smith (13 February 1955 – 30 November 2000) was a Canadian musician and the bassist for Canadian rock band Loverboy.The band are best known for their hit singles "Working for the Weekend" and "Turn Me Loose", although their U.S. Top Ten hits were "Lovin' Every Minute of It" in 1985 and "This Could Be the Night" in 1986.