Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The company Yahoo! ran several similar video services. Yahoo! Video, a video hosting service, was established in 2006. Later, the ability to upload videos was removed, changing it to a more pure video on demand service; the website became a portal for curated video content hosted by Yahoo's properties. In 2011, the service was re-launched as Yahoo
Yahoo! Live – Allowed users to broadcast videos in real time; shut down on December 3, 2008. Yahoo! Maktoob – A pan-regional, Arabic-language hosting and social networking service acquired by Yahoo! on August 25, 2009; shut down on October 28, 2022. [53] Yahoo! Maps – Online mapping portal; shut down on June 30, 2015. [54] [55] Yahoo!
Online video platforms allow users to upload, share videos or live stream their own videos to the Internet. These can either be for the general public to watch, or particular users on a shared network. The most popular video hosting website is YouTube, 2 billion active until October 2020 and the most extensive catalog of online videos. [1]
# videos (millions) Views per day (millions) Main server location Prohibits pornography Multilingual Ad revenue sharing Video download-able Registration needed to upload; Aparat: Saba Idea 2011: own TOS [1] Yes >153 [2] >6 [3] Iran: Yes Yes [4] Yes Yes Yes BitChute: Bit Chute Limited [5] 2017: own TOS [6] No Unknown ~0.8 [7] United Kingdom ...
Edgecast Networks, Inc. (formerly Verizon Digital Media Services) [2] was a subsidiary of Yahoo! Inc. and provider of content delivery network (CDN) and video streaming services. Founded in 2006, it was notable for being a self-provisioning CDN technology used by the telecommunication and hosting industries. [3] [4] [5]
Websites that at one time allowed users to upload their own videos, but no longer offer this service or have been shut down. Pages in category "Former video hosting services" The following 52 pages are in this category, out of 52 total.
Yahoo! Live was launched on February 6, 2008 as a "limited preview" and in spite of Yahoo!'s rejection to Microsoft's offer just a few days earlier, the site crashed the same night it was launched due to lack of bandwidth.
The company rolled out a new logo and name, dropping the ".TV" and becoming "Blip." Along with the redesign came a change in business policy, and instead of acting mainly as a video distributor, Blip then "[embraced] its destiny as a video destination with a redesign that put the most popular blip.tv web series front and center." [4]