Curlie
Curlie is a multilingual open-content directory of World Wide Web links. It is constructed and maintained by a community of volunteer editors. It is organized under the non-profit organization “Curlie Project, Inc.” As of September 2017, it is the largest human-edited web directory available with over 3.8 million web sites categorized in over 1 million categories and from over 90 different countries.[1][2][3] It started with most of the content of the DMOZ project, which had shut down on March 17, 2017. It retains at least one former staff member and some senior editors of DMOZ.[4] Some describe Curlie as the "official successor" to DMOZ.[5]
Notes
- ^ Vincent Brossas (September 14, 2017). "Curlie : l'annuaire web mondial DMOZ est de retour". leptidigital.fr (in French). Leptidigital. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ "Curlie Directory". alternativeto.net. Ola Johansson and Markus Olausson in Sweden. December 22, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ "Search Engines and Directory Snapshots". research.library.gsu.edu. Georgia State University. April 12, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ^ Kalee (August 30, 2018). "Dmoz returns under a new name: Curlie". bleery.com. BleerySEO. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
- ^ "Curlie". jasminedirectory.com. GnetAds, Valley Cottage, NY. May 31, 2018. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
External links
Categories:
- World Wide Web stubs
- Internet properties established in 2017
- Collaboration
- Open content projects
- Web directories
- English-language websites
- Spanish-language websites
- Danish-language websites
- German-language websites
- Czech-language websites
- Arabic-language websites
- Catalan-language websites
- Afrikaans-language websites
- Esperanto-language websites
- Aragonese-language websites
- Armenian-language websites
- Asturian-language websites
- Korean-language websites
- Kurdish-language websites
- Latvian-language websites
- Multilingual websites
- Azerbaijani-language websites
- Luxembourgish-language websites
- Lithuanian-language websites
- Indonesian-language websites
- Latin-language websites
- Hungarian-language websites
- Macedonian-language websites
- Malay-language websites
- Bangala-language websites
- Marathi-language websites
- Albanian-language websites
- Belarusian-language websites
- Bashkir-language websites
- Norwegian-language websites
- North Frisian-language websites
- Uzbek-language websites
- Breton-language websites
- Bosnian-language websites
- Bulgarian-language websites
- Occitan-language websites
- Ossetian-language websites
- Persian-language websites
- Chinese-language websites
- Polish-language websites
- Punjabi-language websites
- Portuguese-language websites
- Welsh-language websites
- Dutch-language websites
- Estonian-language websites
- Romanian-language websites
- Basque-language websites
- Russian-language websites
- Sardinian-language websites
- Romansh-language websites
- Saterland Frisian-language websites
- French-language websites
- Sicilian-language websites
- Turkish-language websites
- Sinhala-language websites
- Slovene-language websites
- Slovak-language websites
- West Frisian-language websites
- Friulian-language websites
- Faroese-language websites
- Serbian-language websites
- Finnish-language websites
- Irish-language websites
- Galician-language websites
- Scottish Gaelic websites
- Swedish-language websites
- Tagalog-language websites
- Greek-language websites
- Gujarati-language websites
- Croatian-language websites
- Hindi-language websites
- Tatar-language websites
- Hebrew-language websites
- Telugu-language websites
- Thai-language websites
- Vietnamese-language websites
- Turkmen-language websites
- Ukrainian-language websites
- Kyrgyz-language websites
- Icelandic-language websites
- Uyghur-language websites
- Italian-language websites
- Japanese-language websites
- Kannada-language websites
- Kazakh-language websites
- Swahili-language websites
- Kashubian-language websites
- Interlingua-language websites
- Tamil-language websites