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  2. Yahoo Groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahoo_Groups

    Yahoo! Groups was a free-to-use system of electronic mailing lists offered by Yahoo!. Prior to February 2020, Yahoo! Groups was one of the world's largest collections ...

  3. Talk:List of Yahoo-owned sites and services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:List_of_Yahoo-owned...

    The Yahoo Clubs section is technically a dead service. Started out as a page devoted to a single subject / interestt, with a section for photos. Members of a club could read and post to the main page. Yahoo has since reformatted it into newsgroups, and renamed it "Yahoo Groups" . Http://Clubs.Yahoo.Com redirects to Yahoo Groups.

  4. List of Yahoo-owned sites and services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Yahoo-owned_sites...

    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.

  5. Yahoo News - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahoo_News

    Yahoo! News is a news website that originated as an internet-based news aggregator by Yahoo!.The site was created by Yahoo! software engineer Brad Clawsie in August 1996. Articles originally came from news services such as the Associated Press, Reuters, Fox News, Al Jazeera, ABC News, USA Today, CNN and BBC Ne

  6. Usenet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet

    The collection of Usenet servers has thus a certain peer-to-peer character in that they share resources by exchanging them, the granularity of exchange however is on a different scale than a modern peer-to-peer system and this characteristic excludes the actual users of the system who connect to the news servers with a typical client-server ...

  7. Gmane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmane

    Gmane permits users to access this mailing list as if it were a Usenet newsgroup instead, by using the news server news.gmane.io and group name gmane.science.linguistics.wikipedia.english. Messages posted to the list by email will appear in the Gmane newsgroup, and vice versa.

  8. List of newsgroups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newsgroups

    This is the most extensive newsgroup hierarchy outside of the Big 8. Examples include: alt.atheism — discusses atheism; alt.binaries.slack — artwork created by and for the Church of the SubGenius. alt.config — creation of new newsgroups in the alt.* hierarchy. alt.sex — the first alt.* newsgroup for discussion of sexual topics.

  9. List of Usenet newsreaders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Usenet_newsreaders

    Usenet is a worldwide, distributed discussion system that uses the Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP). Programs called newsreaders are used to read and post messages (called articles or posts, and collectively termed news) to one or more newsgroups.