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The directory was Yahoo!'s first offering and started in 1994 under the name Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web. [1] When Yahoo! changed its main results to crawler-based listings under Yahoo! Search in October 2002, the human-edited directory's significance dropped, but it was still being updated as of August 19, 2014. [2]
Yahoo! Directory– first service that Yahoo! offered. Closed in December 2014. Yahoo! Kids – oldest online search directory for children, until its discontinuation as of April 30, 2013. Zeal – volunteer-built Web directory; it was introduced in 1999, acquired by LookSmart in 2000, and shut down in 2006.
Yahoo!, once one of the most popular web sites in the United States, is as of September 2021 a content sub-division of the namesake company Yahoo Inc., owned by Apollo Global Management (90%) and Verizon Communications (10%). It has offered a wide range of online sites and services since its inception in 1994, a majority of which are now defunct.
This article is part of a series on the: Culture of the United States; Society; History; Language; People. race and ethnicity; Religion; Arts and literature; Architecture
DMOZ or DMoz (stylized dmoz in its logo; from directory.mozilla.org, an earlier domain name) was a multilingual open-content directory of World Wide Web links. The site and community who maintained it were also known as the Open Directory Project (ODP). It was owned by AOL (now a part of Yahoo!
iBaller Entertainment Directory - High Quality Entertainment Sites; Music-Sites.net - Your Music-Directory; Music Website Directory - Links To Bands, Concerts, Instruments And More; MusicFanLinks : A directory with 32,000 music websites for 3,300 artists and bands; Celebrity Websites Directory
Yahoo holds a 34.75% minority stake in Yahoo Japan, while SoftBank holds 35.45%, [169] Yahoo!Xtra in New Zealand, which Yahoo!7 have 51% of and 49% belongs to Telecom New Zealand, and Yahoo!7 in Australia, which is a 50–50 agreement between Yahoo and the Seven Network. Historically, Yahoo entered into joint venture agreements with SoftBank ...
When the primary site that managed web rings, webring.org was acquired by Yahoo, "ring masters" lost access to their webrings [3] and the web ring hubs were replaced by a Yahoo page. [3] By the time Yahoo stopped controlling webring.org in 2001, search engines had become good enough that web rings were no longer as useful. [ 3 ]