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* September 2017: RhythmOne acquired YuMe Inc. for $185 million.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://martechtoday.com/rhythmone-buys-yume-185-million-203591|title=RhythmOne buys YuMe for $185 million - MarTech Today|date=2017-09-05|work=MarTech Today|access-date=2018-06-05|language=en-US}}</ref>
* September 2017: RhythmOne acquired YuMe Inc. for $185 million.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://martechtoday.com/rhythmone-buys-yume-185-million-203591|title=RhythmOne buys YuMe for $185 million - MarTech Today|date=2017-09-05|work=MarTech Today|access-date=2018-06-05|language=en-US}}</ref>
* April 2019: RhythmOne acquired by [[Taptica|Taptica International]]<ref name="Taptica"/>
* April 2019: RhythmOne acquired by [[Taptica|Taptica International]]<ref name="Taptica"/>

== All Media Network ==
{{Infobox company
| name = All Media Network
| logo = All Media Network Logo.jpeg
| logo_caption =
| image =
| image_caption =
| trading_name = All Media Network, LLC
| native_name = <!-- Company's name in home country language -->
| native_name_lang = <!-- Use ISO 639-2 code, e.g. "fr" for French. If there is more than one native name, in different languages, enter those names using {{tl|lang}}, instead. -->
| romanized_name =
| type = [[Privately held company|Private]]
| traded_as =
| industry = [[Entertainment]]
| genre = <!-- Only used with media and publishing companies -->
| fate =
| predecessor = All Media Guide, AllRovi
| successor =
| foundation = {{start date and age|1990|6|26}}<ref>{{cite web|url=http://whois.domaintools.com/amg.com|title=Whois Record for AMg.com|work=[[WHOIS]]|accessdate=2016-03-11}}</ref><br />[[Big Rapids, Michigan]], U.S.
| founder = [[Michael Erlewine]]
| defunct = <!-- {{End date|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
| location_city = [[San Francisco]], [[California]]
| location_country = U.S.
| locations = <!-- Number of locations, stores, offices, etc. -->
| area_served =
| key_people =
| products = [[AllMusic]], [[AllMovie]], AllGame, [[SideReel]], Celebified
| production =
| services =
| revenue =
| operating_income =
| net_income =
| aum = <!-- Only used with financial services companies -->
| assets =
| equity =
| owner =
| num_employees = 11-50
| parent =
| divisions =
| subsid =
| homepage = {{URL|www.allmedianetwork.com|www.AllMediaNetwork.com}}
| footnotes = <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.linkedin.com/company/all-media-network |title=All Media Network, LLC|website=[[LinkedIn]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref><ref name="marketwatch">{{cite web |url=http://www.marketwatch.com/story/digital-entertainment-veterans-launch-all-media-network-to-perfect-digital-media-discovery-2013-12-03 |title=Digital Entertainment Veterans Launch 'All Media Network' to Perfect Digital Media Discovery|date=December 3, 2013|publisher=[[MarketWatch]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref>
| intl =
}}
'''All Media Network''' ('''AMN''') (formerly '''All Media Guide''' ('''AMG''') and '''AllRovi''') was an American [[company (law)|company]] that owned and maintained [[AllMusic]], [[AllMovie]], AllGame (until its closure in 2014), [[SideReel]] and Celebified. The company was founded in 1990 by [[pop culture|popular-culture]] archivist [[Michael Erlewine]]. All Media Network offices were located in [[San Francisco]], California, and [[Ann Arbor, Michigan]], United States, and several other locations across the country.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rhythmone.com/about#locations|title=About Us - RhythmOne|website=www.rhythmone.com|access-date=2019-01-15}}</ref>

All Music Guide (now AllMusic) was launched in 1991. Later in 1994 the All Movie Guide (now AllMovie) was launched and in 1998 the All Game Guide (later AllGame—defunct in 2014).<ref name="metro" />

=== History ===
All Media Network was founded in [[Big Rapids, Michigan]] in 1990 by Michael Erlewine. With the All Music Guide the aim was to "[compile] discographic information on every artist who's made a record since Enrico Caruso gave the industry its first big boost", which launched in 1991.<ref name="wired" />

They expanded with the All Movie Guide (now [[AllMovie]]) in 1994, and then the All Game Guide (now AllGame) in 1998. moved to [[Ann Arbor, Michigan]] in 1999 to take advantage of the "rich talent pool".<ref name="metro" /> AMG was a business unit within [[Alliance Entertainment Corporation]] from 1996 until early 2005. Alliance was acquired in 1999 by [[Yucaipa Companies]], a multibillion-dollar fund based in California.

[[TiVo Corporation|Macrovision (now TiVo)]] announced on November 6, 2007 that it had agreed to purchase All Media Guide for a reported $102 million; $72 million in cash was paid up front, and $30 million in contingent payments were made one year later.<ref name="BusinessWire">{{cite press release |url=http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20071106006601&newsLang=en |archive-url=https://archive.is/20130102070452/http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20071106006601&newsLang=en |dead-url=yes |archive-date=January 2, 2013 |title=Macrovision Agrees to Acquire All Media Guide Holdings, Inc. |publisher=BusinessWire |date=November 6, 2007 |accessdate=November 6, 2007 }}</ref><ref name="Mandasoft">{{cite web |url= http://mandasoft.com/1/11787/macrovision_corporation_acquired_all_media_guide_holdings_inc |title= Macrovision Corporation, acquired All Media Guide Holdings, Inc. |publisher= Mandasoft |date= December 17, 2007 |accessdate= June 18, 2012}}</ref> For a time, all of the guides were controlled by Rovi's nameservers and combined access to the All Music and All Movie Guides was provided via AllRovi.com from 2011 until 2013. In 2013, Rovi sold consumer access of the content to the newly established All Media Network, LLC, but retained control of licensing the content to other businesses. The overall website is allmedianetwork.com (previously allmediaguide.com and allrovi.com).

Rovi sold the consumer access to them to newly established All Media Network, LLC in 2013, while retaining ownership and maintenance of the content itself.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rovicorp.com/company/press-releases/2013/7/31/rovicorp-reports-second-quarter-2013-financial-performance.html |title=Rovi Corporation Reports Second Quarter 2013 Financial Performance|date=July 31, 2013|publisher=[[Rovi Corporation]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref><ref name="faq">{{cite web |url=http://getsatisfaction.com/allmedianetwork/topics/whats_the_story_on_rovi |title=What's the Story on Rovi |last1=Zac |first1=Johnson |date=September 2013|accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref>

The AllGame section of the site was shut down on December 12, 2014.<ref name="GameOver">{{cite web|url=http://www.allgame.com |title=allgame |publisher=AllGame |accessdate=15 November 2014 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141115150418/http://www.allgame.com/ |archivedate=November 15, 2014 |deadurl=yes }}</ref>

On April 16, 2015 Blinkx Plc acquired All Media Network and rebranded the website under the new unified RhythmOne Group banner.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rhythmone.com/news/2015/04/23/introducing-rhythmone|title=Introducing RhythmOneBlog - RhythmOne|website=www.rhythmone.com|access-date=2019-01-15}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://investor.rhythmone.com/newsroom/2015/04/16/blinkx-acquires-all-media-network-llc|title=BLINKX ACQUIRES ALL MEDIA NETWORK, LLC - Newsroom - RhythmOne|website=investor.rhythmone.com|access-date=2019-01-15}}</ref>

== Services and products ==

=== AllMusic ===
[[File:Wordmark of AllMusic (2013).png|thumb|AllMusic logo]]{{Main|AllMusic}}
AllMusic is an online database which provides access to information about songs, albums, musicians, bands, and musical styles alongside staff-authored news, reviews, biographies, ratings and recommendations. The content was initially published in book form in 1991 as the All Music Guide, and is now freely available to the public for online reference and information as well as available via licensing for point-of-sale systems, media players, and online music stores.<ref name="metro">{{cite web |url=http://www2.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=10087 |title=Make it or Break it |last=Bowe |first=Brian J. |date=January 24, 2007 |work=[[Metro Times]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.allmusic.com/faq | title = AllMusic FAQ | publisher = All Media Network, LLC | accessdate = March 29, 2014 | quote = ©2014 AllMusic, a division of All Media Network, LLC}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/53djj8/the-story-of-allmusic-the-internets-largest-most-influential-music-database|title=The Story of AllMusic, the Internet’s Largest, Most Influential Music Database|date=2016-09-24|work=Motherboard|access-date=2017-12-06|language=en-us}}</ref>

==== Guide series ====
RhythmOne also produces the AllMusic guide series that includes the All Music Guide to Jazz and the [[All Music Guide to the Blues]]. Vladimir Bogdanov is the president of the series.

=== AllMovie ===
[[File:Allmovie Logo.png|thumb|AllMovie logo]]{{Main|AllMovie}}
AllMovie, launched in 1994 as the All Movie Guide, provides access to information about actors, films, and filmmakers with staff-authored news, reviews, ratings, and recommendations. It offers limited information about Television productions, focused mainly on those released on DVD. Like [[AllMusic]], this content is also available via licensing to point-of-sale systems, media players, and online stores.<ref name="metro" /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.allmovie.com/faq#tv |title=What About TV Information|publisher=[[AllMovie]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.allmovie.com/ | title = AllMovie| publisher = All Media Network, LLC | accessdate = March 29, 2014 | quote = ©2014 AllMovie, a division of All Media Network, LLC}}</ref>

=== AllGame ===
[[File:Allgame.svg|thumb|AllGame logo]]
AllGame was active between 1998–2014 as the All Game Guide, it offered information and reviews about many console, hand held, arcade, and PC games released in the US.<ref name="marketwatch" /><ref name="metro" /><ref>{{cite web | url = http://allgame.com/pages/a_about.php | title = AllGame FAQs | publisher = All Media Network, LLC | accessdate = March 29, 2014 | quote = © 2014 AllGame, a division of All Media Network, LLC}}</ref> The site started in February 1998 with the goal of becoming the most comprehensive game database available.<ref name="allgame-farewell">{{cite web|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141212022638/http://www.allgame.com/|archivedate=December 12, 2014|title=Farewell...|website=[[AllGame]]|url=http://www.allgame.com/|accessdate=July 27, 2017}}</ref> In a farewell message on their site, the staff noted that they "didn't all know exactly what we were doing in those early days but it was an exciting time to be helping build an online game database before the Internet exploded with numerous websites dedicated to video games."<ref name="allgame-farewell" />

=== SideReel ===
[[File:SideReel.svg|thumb|SideReel logo]]{{Main|SideReel}}
SideReel,<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.sidereel.com/topic/about | title = About SideReel | publisher = All Media Network, LLC | accessdate = March 29, 2014 | quote = © 2014 SideReel, a division of All Media Network, LLC}}</ref> launched in 2007, is a TV community site which provides information about TV shows and episodes.<ref name="marketwatch" />

=== Celebified ===
Celebified offers celebrity news and interviews and started in 2012.<ref name="marketwatch" />

== Operations ==
=== Business model ===
The AllMusic database is also used by several generations of [[Windows Media Player]] and [[Musicmatch Jukebox]] to identify and organize music collections. Windows Media Player 11 and the integrated [[MTV]] Urge music store have expanded the use of AllMusic data to include related artists, biographies, reviews, playlists and other data.<ref name="metro" />

All Media Network licenses large databases of [[Metadata (computing)|metadata]] about movies, video games, audio books, and music releases from [[Rovi Corporation]] and publishes them online for consumer use. This includes credits, and staff-written biographies, reviews, ratings, and recommendations as well as categories such as theme or mood.<ref name="faq" /> Rovi also makes this content available for [[point of sale]] systems in stores globally, for [[Compact Disk|CD]] and [[DVD]] recognition in [[Media player (software)|software media players]] such as [[Windows Media Player]] and [[Musicmatch Jukebox]], and for providing content for a variety of websites including [[iTunes]], [[Pandora Radio|Pandora]], and [[Spotify]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.musicminder.com/scripts/entertainers/displayentertainer.asp?ID=008018 |title=ALLMUSIC|publisher=musicminder.com |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.billboard.com/biz/articles/news/1179058/allmusiccom-folding-into-allrovicom-for-one-stop-entertainment-shop |title=AllMusic.com Folding Into AllRovi.com for One-Stop Entertainment Shop |last1=Bruno |first1=Antony |date=February 28, 2011 |work=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref>

Formerly, All Media Guide sold print compilations of its information.<ref name="wired">{{cite web |url=https://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.02/all.music.html |title=All Music |last=Wolf |first=Gary |date=February 1994 |work=[[Wired (magazine)|Wired]] |accessdate=February 27, 2014}}</ref>

=== Content and data management ===
RhythmOne's database was initially set up by [[Vladimir Bogdanov (editor)|Vladimir Bogdanov]] to hold the information of Erlewine's many lists.<ref name="metro" />

Information in the database is licensed and used in point-of-sale systems by some music retailers, includes the following:

* Basic data: names, genres, credits, copyright information, product numbers.
* Descriptive content: styles, tones, moods, themes, nationalities.
* Relational content: similar artists and albums, influences.
* Editorial content: biographies, reviews, rankings.

The company claims to have the largest digital archive of music, including about six million digital songs, as well as the largest cover art library, with more than half a million cover image scans.{{Citation needed|date=December 2017}}


==Adware controversy==
==Adware controversy==
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* [[IPTV]]
* [[IPTV]]
* [[Joost]]
* [[Joost]]
* [[List of online music databases]]
* [[Miro (software)]]
* [[Miro (software)]]
* [[Slingbox]]
* [[Slingbox]]
* [[Stephen Thomas Erlewine]], senior editor of AllMusic
* [[Veoh]]
* [[Veoh]]


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[[Category:Video hosting]]
[[Category:Video hosting]]
[[Category:Internet television]]
[[Category:Internet television]]
[[Category:Online companies of the United States]]
[[Category:Online databases]]
[[Category:Online film databases]]
[[Category:Online music and lyrics databases]]
[[Category:Music databases]]
[[Category:Television websites]]
[[Category:Entertainment companies based in California]]
[[Category:Media companies of the United States]]
[[Category:Companies based in San Francisco]]
[[Category:AllMusic]]

Revision as of 13:37, 26 August 2019

RhythmOne plc
Company typePublic
IndustryInternet services
FoundedJuly, 2004
DefunctApril 2019
FateAcquired by Taptica International
Headquarters
San Francisco
,
USA
Number of employees
525 (June 2017)[1]
Websiterhythmone.com

RhythmOne plc, previously known as Blinkx,[2][3][4] and also known as RhythmOne Group, is a digital advertising technology company focused on cross-device engagement.[1]

Founded in 2004, blinkx went public on the London Stock Exchange (AIM) in May, 2007 and began trading as RhythmOne in 2017.[4] The company is headquartered in San Francisco, CA and London, England, and has pursued a strategy of frequent mergers and acquisitions.

In April 2019, RhythmOne was acquired by Taptica International, an advertising technology company headquartered in Israel.[5]

Blinkx.com

Blinkx was named after blinkx.com, an Internet Media platform that connects online video viewers with publishers and distributors, using advertising to monetize those interactions. Blinkx has an index of over 35 million hours of video and 800 media partnerships; 111 patents related to the site's search engine technology, which is known as CORE.[6]

History

  • 2004: Suranga Chandratillake, former US chief technology officer of Autonomy Corporation, founded Blinkx as a toolbar for web search, specializing in video.[7]
  • December 2004: Blinkx launches audio and video search engine.[8]
  • July 2005: Blinkx launches SmartFeed, an RSS web feed for video links.[9]
  • June 2006: Blinkx reaches 4 million hours of searchable video content.[10]
  • October 2006: Microsoft Corp. agrees to use Blinkx technology to power the video search on some parts of its MSN service and Live.com.[11] Other sites it powers include Lycos, InfoSpace, the RealPlayer and parts of AOL.
  • February 2007: Blinkx receives DEMOgod award from DEMO 07 conference organizers.[12]
  • June 2007: Blinkx launches contextual video advertising platform named AdHoc.[13]
  • March 2008: Blinkx releases the Blinkx Beat video screensaver.[14]
  • April 2008: The company launches its broadband TV application.[15]
  • May 2008: Blinkx introduces the Advanced Media Platform (AMP), a proprietary video content management solution.[16]
  • August 2008: Launch of Blinkx Remote, a directory of full-length TV shows online for the US and UK.[17]
  • December 2008: Blinkx introduces the Un-roll Unit, a new ad unit for online video.[18]
  • April 2009: Acquires some of the assets of the bankrupt Zango company under its Pinball Corporation subsidiary.[19]
  • August 2009: Blinkx joins YouTube, Hulu, and Yahoo! on Nielsen's Top 10 Video Sites.[20]
  • April 2010: The company launches behavioral targeting through Blinkx AdHoc.[21]
  • May 2010: Blinkx launches mobile video search site.[22]
  • July 2010: Blinkx announces the launch of a new mobile API (Application Programming Interface).[23]
  • October 2010: Blinkx launches Blinkx Beat for Google TV.[24]
  • October 2010: The company launches Cheep social shopping service.[25]
  • November 2010: Blinkx achieves profitability and positive operating cash flow, doubles revenue year on year.[26]
  • February 2011: Blinkx introduces TV API (Application Programming Interface).[27]
  • February 2011: Blinkx announces partnership with woomi, the new connected TV destination from Miniweb Interactive, the cloud-based video distribution platform.[28]
  • February 2011: Blinkx announces the Blinkx app will be available on Boxee.[29]
  • April 2011: Blinkx announces the acquisition of Burst Media, an online media and technology company headquartered in Burlington, Massachusetts. This acquisition brought 35 million hours of online video and TV to Burst Media's audience of over 130 million unique users.[30]
  • May 2011: Blinkx announces the Blinkx app is available on Roku.[31]
  • October 2011: Blinkx Appoints Frank Pao Executive Vice President of Business Affairs and General Counsel.[32]
  • November 2011: Blinkx Announces Partnership With Orb Networks to Bring 35 Million Hours of TV, Video and Audio to Orb TV and Orb BR Users.[33]
  • November 2011: Blinkx acquires Prime Visibility Media Group (PVMG).[34]
  • January 2012: Blinkx receives a U.S. Patent for Moving Thumbnails technology.[35]
  • February 2012: Blinkx CEO Suranga Chandratillake Selected for San Francisco Business Times 40 Under 40[36]
  • March 2012: Blinkx Surpasses 100 Million Global Monthly Unique Visitors.[37]
  • July 2012: Chief Operating Officer Subhransu “Brian” Mukherjee appointed CEO and Executive Member of Board of Directors; Suranga Chandratillake, Founder, assumed role of President and Chief Strategy Officer.[38]
  • July 2012: Blinkx founder Suranga Chandratillake elected Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering.[39]
  • September 2012: Open beta of next-generation Blinkx site.[40]
  • October 2012: Dan Slivjanovski appointed as Senior Vice President of Marketing.[41]
  • January 2013: Blinkx's next-generation video search and discovery site goes live.[42]
  • April 2015: Blinkx acquires All Media Network for an undisclosed amount, including website properties Sidereel.com, Allmusic.com and Allmovie.com.[43]
  • April 2015: Blinkx unifies its brands under the name RhythmOne.[44]
  • June 2016: Blinkx plc changes its name to RhythmOne plc and began trading as RhythmOne plc on the London Stock Exchange.[3][4]
  • December 2016: RhythmOne acquired Austin, Texas-based mobile rewards company Perk.com.[45]
  • June 2017: RhythmOne acquired assets and 200 employees from RadiumOne.[1]
  • September 2017: RhythmOne acquired YuMe Inc. for $185 million.[46]
  • April 2019: RhythmOne acquired by Taptica International[5]

All Media Network

All Media Network
All Media Network, LLC
Company typePrivate
IndustryEntertainment
PredecessorAll Media Guide, AllRovi
FoundedJune 26, 1990; 34 years ago (1990-06-26)[47]
Big Rapids, Michigan, U.S.
FounderMichael Erlewine
Headquarters,
U.S.
ProductsAllMusic, AllMovie, AllGame, SideReel, Celebified
Number of employees
11-50
Websitewww.AllMediaNetwork.com
Footnotes / references
[48][49]

All Media Network (AMN) (formerly All Media Guide (AMG) and AllRovi) was an American company that owned and maintained AllMusic, AllMovie, AllGame (until its closure in 2014), SideReel and Celebified. The company was founded in 1990 by popular-culture archivist Michael Erlewine. All Media Network offices were located in San Francisco, California, and Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States, and several other locations across the country.[50]

All Music Guide (now AllMusic) was launched in 1991. Later in 1994 the All Movie Guide (now AllMovie) was launched and in 1998 the All Game Guide (later AllGame—defunct in 2014).[51]

History

All Media Network was founded in Big Rapids, Michigan in 1990 by Michael Erlewine. With the All Music Guide the aim was to "[compile] discographic information on every artist who's made a record since Enrico Caruso gave the industry its first big boost", which launched in 1991.[52]

They expanded with the All Movie Guide (now AllMovie) in 1994, and then the All Game Guide (now AllGame) in 1998. moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1999 to take advantage of the "rich talent pool".[51] AMG was a business unit within Alliance Entertainment Corporation from 1996 until early 2005. Alliance was acquired in 1999 by Yucaipa Companies, a multibillion-dollar fund based in California.

Macrovision (now TiVo) announced on November 6, 2007 that it had agreed to purchase All Media Guide for a reported $102 million; $72 million in cash was paid up front, and $30 million in contingent payments were made one year later.[53][54] For a time, all of the guides were controlled by Rovi's nameservers and combined access to the All Music and All Movie Guides was provided via AllRovi.com from 2011 until 2013. In 2013, Rovi sold consumer access of the content to the newly established All Media Network, LLC, but retained control of licensing the content to other businesses. The overall website is allmedianetwork.com (previously allmediaguide.com and allrovi.com).

Rovi sold the consumer access to them to newly established All Media Network, LLC in 2013, while retaining ownership and maintenance of the content itself.[55][56]

The AllGame section of the site was shut down on December 12, 2014.[57]

On April 16, 2015 Blinkx Plc acquired All Media Network and rebranded the website under the new unified RhythmOne Group banner.[58][59]

Services and products

AllMusic

AllMusic logo

AllMusic is an online database which provides access to information about songs, albums, musicians, bands, and musical styles alongside staff-authored news, reviews, biographies, ratings and recommendations. The content was initially published in book form in 1991 as the All Music Guide, and is now freely available to the public for online reference and information as well as available via licensing for point-of-sale systems, media players, and online music stores.[51][60][61]

Guide series

RhythmOne also produces the AllMusic guide series that includes the All Music Guide to Jazz and the All Music Guide to the Blues. Vladimir Bogdanov is the president of the series.

AllMovie

AllMovie logo

AllMovie, launched in 1994 as the All Movie Guide, provides access to information about actors, films, and filmmakers with staff-authored news, reviews, ratings, and recommendations. It offers limited information about Television productions, focused mainly on those released on DVD. Like AllMusic, this content is also available via licensing to point-of-sale systems, media players, and online stores.[51][62][63]

AllGame

AllGame logo

AllGame was active between 1998–2014 as the All Game Guide, it offered information and reviews about many console, hand held, arcade, and PC games released in the US.[49][51][64] The site started in February 1998 with the goal of becoming the most comprehensive game database available.[65] In a farewell message on their site, the staff noted that they "didn't all know exactly what we were doing in those early days but it was an exciting time to be helping build an online game database before the Internet exploded with numerous websites dedicated to video games."[65]

SideReel

SideReel logo

SideReel,[66] launched in 2007, is a TV community site which provides information about TV shows and episodes.[49]

Celebified

Celebified offers celebrity news and interviews and started in 2012.[49]

Operations

Business model

The AllMusic database is also used by several generations of Windows Media Player and Musicmatch Jukebox to identify and organize music collections. Windows Media Player 11 and the integrated MTV Urge music store have expanded the use of AllMusic data to include related artists, biographies, reviews, playlists and other data.[51]

All Media Network licenses large databases of metadata about movies, video games, audio books, and music releases from Rovi Corporation and publishes them online for consumer use. This includes credits, and staff-written biographies, reviews, ratings, and recommendations as well as categories such as theme or mood.[56] Rovi also makes this content available for point of sale systems in stores globally, for CD and DVD recognition in software media players such as Windows Media Player and Musicmatch Jukebox, and for providing content for a variety of websites including iTunes, Pandora, and Spotify.[67][68]

Formerly, All Media Guide sold print compilations of its information.[52]

Content and data management

RhythmOne's database was initially set up by Vladimir Bogdanov to hold the information of Erlewine's many lists.[51]

Information in the database is licensed and used in point-of-sale systems by some music retailers, includes the following:

  • Basic data: names, genres, credits, copyright information, product numbers.
  • Descriptive content: styles, tones, moods, themes, nationalities.
  • Relational content: similar artists and albums, influences.
  • Editorial content: biographies, reviews, rankings.

The company claims to have the largest digital archive of music, including about six million digital songs, as well as the largest cover art library, with more than half a million cover image scans.[citation needed]

Adware controversy

A lengthy criticism of Blinkx by Harvard Business School Associate Professor[69] Ben Edelman, published in January 2014,[70] sought to prove that Blinkx continued the adware operations of two companies it acquired, Prime Visibility Media Group[71] and Zango,[72] and was defrauding advertisers. Blinkx responded point-by-point in March 2014, stating that it did not install adware without user consent and that they did not wholly acquire Zango or its assets.[73] An earlier, 2009 blog post by Ken Smith, Zango co-founder and former CTO, supported Edelman's assertion that Blinkx acquired all of Zango's assets.[74]

Forbes contributor Peter Cohan claimed that Edelman's post caused a massive drop in blinkx's stock price,[75] and further noted that Blinkx's initial, now-deleted corporate response on 30 January 2014[76] was largely an attack on Edelman's methods, rather than on the content of his analysis. However, New York Times blogger Mark Scott theorized that Edelman's undisclosed client(s), who funded his research on Blinkx, may have been hedge funds who profited from shorting the drop in Blinkx's stock price.[77]

Endelman published further research in April 2014, claiming that Blinkx offered users deceptive software installers and used deceptive pop-up advertisements.[78] He continued to defend his claim that Blinkx purchased all of Zango's assets, including its physical headquarters, and argued that an FTC order against Zango in 2007[79] may still apply to Blinkx. A section of the post co-authored with digital fraud investigation consultant Wesley Brandi also defended and furthered his initial claims that Blinkx was defrauding its advertising affiliates.[80]

Executives

  • Mark Bonney, Chief Executive Officer[81]
  • Suranga Chandratillake, President and Chief Strategy Officer
  • Richard O'Connor, Chief Financial Officer[81]
  • Frank Pao, Chief Business Officer[81]
  • Dan Slivjanovski, Chief Marketing Officer[81]
  • Richard Nunn, Chief Revenue Officer[81]
  • Bhaskar Ballapragada, Senior Vice President, Product[81]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Williams, Azadeh (June 28, 2017). "Adtech company RhythmOne acquires RadiumOne for US$22m". Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  2. ^ The company stylized the name and logo in all-lowercase as "blinkx".
  3. ^ a b "Blinkx Changes Name To RhythmOne To Align Brand With". MorningstarUK. June 16, 2016. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Moore, Steven. "RhythmOne – as blinkx changes its name, shareholders not as enthusiastic as the management guff". ShareProphets. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  5. ^ a b "Appointment of CEO, RhythmOne Trading Update and Commencement of Share Buyback Programme" (PDF). Taptica International. April 2, 2019. Retrieved July 19, 2019.
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