Bomis

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Bomis, Inc.
Image:Bomis.com logo.png
Type Private
Founded 1996
Headquarters St. Petersburg, Florida, United States[citation needed]
Key people Jimmy Wales
Tim Shell
Michael Davis
Industry Internet
Products Internet portal
Advertising space
Revenue N/A
Employees 10
Website www.bomis.com

Bomis (IPA: [/ˈbɑməs/])[1] is a dot-com company founded in 1996. Its primary business is the sale of advertising on the Bomis.com search portal. It was founded by Jimmy Wales and Tim Shell[citation needed], and provided support for the free encyclopedia projects Nupedia and Wikipedia. As of 2006, Tim Shell is the CEO of Bomis.

On the Bomis.com site, Bomis creates and hosts web rings around popular search terms. The rings are currently categorized broadly as "Babes", "Entertainment", "Sports", "Adult", "Other" and "Science fiction".[2] The "Adult", "Babes" and "Entertainment" categories are the most frequently updated and the most popular. In addition, Bomis hosts a copy of the Open Directory Project search directory. Revenue from search-related pages is generated from advertising and affiliate marketing.

Silvia Saint in a Bomis T-Shirt
Silvia Saint in a Bomis T-Shirt

Bomis ran a website called Bomis Premium at premium.bomis.com until 2005, offering customers access to erotic photographs featuring 403 different models (a total of 54658 pictures), and videos of models in all states of undressing and suggestive poses.[citation needed] Until mid-2005, Bomis also featured the Bomis Babe Report, a free blog, publishing news and reviews about celebrities, models, and the adult entertainment industry. The Babe Report prominently linked to Bomis Premium, and frequently posted updates about new models joining Bomis. Bomis has also operated nekkid.info, a free repository of selected erotic photographs,[3] and continues to host The Babe Engine, "a precision babe search engine", which indexes photos ranging from glamour photography to pornography.[4]

In addition to its erotica and search properties, Bomis has provided hosting to websites supporting objectivist or libertarian political views, including the "Freedom's Nest",[5] a database of books and quotes, and "We the Living", a large objectivist community website which is now defunct.

[edit] Role in the creation of Nupedia and Wikipedia

As of 2005, Bomis is best known for having supported the creation of the free-content online encyclopedia projects Nupedia and Wikipedia. Wales started Nupedia in 2000, and Larry Sanger was hired to manage and edit that project. A year into the development of Nupedia, a wiki was set up as a way to solicit new drafts for Nupedia; named Wikipedia. While originally intended as a 'feeder' project for Nupedia, Wikipedia — with its much lower barriers to contribution — rapidly outgrew its parent in size and attention.

For a while, Bomis provided web servers and bandwidth for these projects, paid Sanger in his role as project editor-in-chief (until he left the projects in 2002), and owned key items such as the associated domain names. However, as the costs and popularity of Wikipedia rose, a general reluctance to display advertising on the site — together with a desire to reflect the spirit of openness and neutrality central to Wikipedia — suggested an alternative ownership model. See full article: History of Wikipedia

The Wikimedia Foundation was formally announced on June 20, 2003, and all intellectual property and domain name assets were transferred or donated to this non-profit organization. Existing server hardware was not transferred. [6] Larry Sanger had left the project by this time, but Jimmy Wales retains a key role on the board of the Foundation, along with users elected from the Wikipedia community. The Foundation now funds the operation of Wikipedia (and its sister projects) primarily through donations from readers. Bomis CEO Tim Shell was the Vice Chair of the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation until December 2006, when he was replaced by Jan-Bart de Vreede.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bomis FAQ
  2. ^ Bomis What's New. Retrieved on December 24, 2005.
  3. ^ See domain name registration information and archived copies
  4. ^ The site is advertised on Bomis.com; as of March 2006, it resolved to the same IP address as premium.bomis.com, and it uses bomis.com as its nameservers.
  5. ^ Freedom's Nest website. Retrieved on March 16, 2006.
  6. ^ Wikipedia-l - Announcing Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved on April 7, 2007.

[edit] External links and sources

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