http://ift.tt/2lw3lpY
RIP Dmoz: The Open Directory Project is closing http://ift.tt/2l8S7Mk DMOZ — The Open Directory Project that uses human editors to organize web sites — is closing. It marks the end of a time when humans, rather than machines, tried to organize the web. The announcement came via a notice that’s now showing on the home page of the DMOZ site, saying it will close as of March 14, 2017: Dmoz was born in June 1998 as first at “GnuHoo” then quickly changed to “NewHoo,” a rival to theYahoo Directory at the time. Yahoo had faced criticism as being too powerful and too difficult for sites to be listed in. It was soon acquired by Netscape in November 1998 and renamed the Netscape Open Directory. Later that month, AOL acquired Netscape, giving AOL control of The Open Directory. Also born that year was Google, which was the start of the end of human curation of web sites. Google bought both the power of being able to search every page on the web with the relevancy that was a hallmark of human-powered directories. Yahoo eventually shifted to preferring machine-generated results over human power, pushing its directory further and further behind-the-scenes until when its closure was announced in September 2014. The actual closure came in December 2014, with the old site these days entirely unresponsive. Dmoz continued on, although for marketers and searchers, it had also long been mostly forgotten as a resource. About the only surprise in today’s news is that it took so long.
SEO via Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing http://ift.tt/fN1KYC February 28, 2017 at 08:49AM
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Categories
All
Archives
November 2020
|