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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BomisBomis - Wikipedia

    Bomis ( / ˈbɒmɪs /, from Bitter Old Men in Suits; [14] rhyming with "promise"), [15] was a dot-com company best known for supporting the creations of free-content online-encyclopedia projects Nupedia and Wikipedia. [9] It was co-founded in 1996 by Jimmy Wales, Tim Shell, and Michael Davis. [16] [17] [18] By 2007, the company was inactive ...

  2. Mar 19, 2013 · Gets caught editing his own Wikipedia bio to remove mentions of Larry Sanger as cofounder, as well as references to “soft-core pornography” on Bomis. He says he is correcting errors but also ...

    • Ted Greenwald
  3. Jan 13, 2021 · [Bomis created a model for information discovery called] a web ring. And people could come and create web rings on any topic. One of the first examples was somebody collected a bunch of links about Jupiter and they made a web ring about Jupiter.

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  5. Nov 20, 2020 · By Our Powers Combined …. How the webring became the grassroots tool of choice for sharing content online in the ‘90s. The concept was social media before media was social. Hey all, Ernie here with a refreshed piece about webrings. Sometimes it happens that you get really far on something (in my case with a piece on Linux and video game ...

  6. Mar 27, 2024 · During the dotcom boom in 1996, Wales saw potential in harnessing the internet to make information free and accessible globally. Teaming up with friends Tim Shell and Michael Davis, the young entrepreneurs founded web portal company Bomis in San Diego. Specializing in handcrafted web directories, Bomis enjoyed early traction and profits.

  7. Bomis is a ‘web ring’, a sort of telephone directory for the web which will soon be made obsolete by the new search engine Google. The only business model that works is softcore pornography. Bomis starts with a regular “Bomis Report”, with Baywatch Babes Ring rankings.

  8. Jun 24, 2022 · See Bomis on Archive.org. Bomis and it’s directory of rings (the directory built on top of a copy of Dmoz.org) was intended to be a sort of crowd sourced directory for navigating the web in a manner similar to the indexes of rings at the traditional webring hosts (see the directory of rings on Webringo as an example.)

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