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| location=London}}</ref>{{not in reference|date=June 2012}}<!-- referenced article does not use words as strong as "very similar", and does not even mention Facebook -->
| location=London}}</ref>{{not in reference|date=June 2012}}<!-- referenced article does not use words as strong as "very similar", and does not even mention Facebook -->


Bebo was founded by a big MASSIVE JEW[[Michael Birch (businessman)|Michael Birch]] and his wife Xochi Birch in January 2005 at their home in [[San Francisco]].<ref name = "Michael and Xochi Birch"/> The website name was bought by the founders, and the [[backronym]] "Blog Early, Blog Often" was invented to answer the question of what the name meant.<ref>Michael Birch speaking on the BBC Radio 4 programme "The Bottom Line" broadcast on June 30, 2011.</ref><ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2006/jun/18/digitalmedia.observerreview "How to make 80 million friends and influence people"], ''The Independent'', 11 February 2011</ref> The site was acquired by AOL on March 13, 2008 for $850 million, with the Birch's combined 70% stake yielding a profit of $595 million from the deal.<ref>[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ea66262a-f0f8-11dc-a91a-0000779fd2ac.html FT.com / In depth - AOL to ‘supercharge’ Bebo revenues<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>{{cite news
Bebo was founded by a big MASSIVE CRACKHEAD(businessman)|Michael Birch]] and his wife Xochi Birch in January 2005 at their home in [[San Francisco]].<ref name = "Michael and Xochi Birch"/> The website name was bought by the founders, and the [[backronym]] "Blog Early, Blog Often" was invented to answer the question of what the name meant.<ref>Michael Birch speaking on the BBC Radio 4 programme "The Bottom Line" broadcast on June 30, 2011.</ref><ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2006/jun/18/digitalmedia.observerreview "How to make 80 million friends and influence people"], ''The Independent'', 11 February 2011</ref> The site was acquired by AOL on March 13, 2008 for $850 million, with the Birch's combined 70% stake yielding a profit of $595 million from the deal.<ref>[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ea66262a-f0f8-11dc-a91a-0000779fd2ac.html FT.com / In depth - AOL to ‘supercharge’ Bebo revenues<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>{{cite news
| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7294174.stm
| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7294174.stm
| title = AOL acquires Bebo social network
| title = AOL acquires Bebo social network

Revision as of 16:23, 21 November 2012

Bebo, Inc.
File:Bebo-2011.png
Bebo homepage as of November 2011
Type of businessPrivate
Type of site
Social network service
Available inMultilingual
FoundedJanuary 2005 (2005-01)[1]
HeadquartersSan Francisco, California, United States
Area servedWorldwide
Founder(s)Michael Birch
Xochi Birch
Key peopleAdam Levin[2] (CEO)
IndustrySocial networking
Operating income$1.1 million (USD)
ProfitN/A
Employees56
ParentCriterion Capital Partners
DivisionsMusic, video, authors (October 2011)
URLwww.bebo.com
AdvertisingBanner ads
RegistrationRequired
LaunchedJuly 2005 (2005-07)
Current statusActive

Bebo (/'bi:boʊ/) is a social networking website launched in 2005. It is currently owned and operated by Criterion Capital Partners who took over from AOL in June 2010.

Users receive a personal profile page where they can post blogs, photographs, music, videos and questionnaires which other users may answer. Additionally, users may add others as friends and send them messages, and update their personal profiles to notify friends about themselves. Bebo is very similar to other social networking sites, mainly Facebook.[1][failed verification]

Bebo was founded by a big MASSIVE CRACKHEAD(businessman)|Michael Birch]] and his wife Xochi Birch in January 2005 at their home in San Francisco.[1] The website name was bought by the founders, and the backronym "Blog Early, Blog Often" was invented to answer the question of what the name meant.[4][5] The site was acquired by AOL on March 13, 2008 for $850 million, with the Birch's combined 70% stake yielding a profit of $595 million from the deal.[6][7][8] However, the founders and executives of Bebo had stated that their end goal had been to sell out to a larger company, as they were well aware of the site's platform instabilities. Many suggested that AOL overpaid for Bebo, especially as advertising suffered a downturn due to the financial crisis. Furthermore AOL was unwilling to invest and continue developing Bebo so that it could remain competitive with Facebook.[9][10]

In April 2010, AOL announced it was planning to sell or shut down Bebo,[11] with the sale being completed on June 17, 2010 to Criterion Capital Partners for an undisclosed sum which was reportedly under $10 million.[12][13]

The BBC said that the AOL purchase of Bebo was "one of the worst deals ever made in the dotcom era",[12] and it cost the then-CEO of AOL, Randy Falco, his job.[14]

Website

Each Bebo User receives a profile, which must include two specific modules: a comment section where other users can leave a message, and a list of the user's friends. Users can select from many more modules to add. By default, when an account is created the profile is private, which limits access to friends specifically added. The user may select the "Public Profile" option so the profile will still be visible to any other members of a school they may have joined.[clarification needed] Profiles may be personalized by a design template that is the background of the user's profile, known as a skin. Profiles may include quizzes which offer multiple choice, polls for their friends to vote in and comment on, photo albums which allows the user to upload an unlimited number of images with a maximum limit of 96 per album, blogs with a comments section, a list of bands of which the user is a fan, a list of groups that the user is a member of. A "Video Box" may be added, either hot-linked from YouTube, uploaded directly to Bebo's servers via Motionbox or copied from a Bebo Media Content Provider's page.

Lifestream

Users can view the recent changes friends have made to their homepage from the "Home" menu. These changes can include uploaded photos, updated flashboxes, and newly added videos and friends. A friend's updates to Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and other services can also be viewed, if those friends have linked those accounts to their Bebo profile. The site has a number of privacy settings, where users can control which items from their profile appear on their and their friends' lifestream pages (e.g. photos, their "sayings", applications, comments, etc.)

Bebo Mobile

Bebo launched the mobile version of the site in early 2006, making users access Bebo from a mobile device.[clarification needed] In 2007 and 2010, the mobile site was updated to match the design and features of the full site.

In 2009, Bebo released a free application on the App Store, letting users visit Bebo on their iPhones and iPod Touch's under AOL, Bebo's former owners. In April 2011, the Bebo app was removed from the App Store and is currently in the stage of being redesigned and updated. The new version is scheduled for re-launch in late 2011. Bebo finally scheduled a release date for the application being as December, 24. However, in almost a week later. The app has not been released nor has there been any word why.[needs update]

It is reported[when?] that Bebo is looking into a BlackBerry application and on other smartphones.[citation needed]

Bebo Authors

On February 22, 2007, Bebo Authors, also known as Bebo Books, was launched. On this section of the site, authors can upload chapters of their books and also get them reviewed with a certain module. Currently,[when?] there is no module to display books on a profile page as there is for Bands and Groups.

Bebo Groups

On July 10, 2007, the "Group" module was added to pages. This enabled people to view groups which were previously joined to a school and were also viewable only to school members. Bebo also gave an option to convert existing Authors or Bands to Groups. This conversion takes up to 24 hours as the profile must be manually changed by a member of Bebo staff. Group pages give users an option to join things they find interesting. These groups can often be educational as well as associated with Big Brother UK 2008.[15]

Bebo Third Party Login

Users can log in and/or make a Bebo account using their existing Facebook account (using a service called Facebook Connect), their AIM (AOL Instant Messenger) account, and a number of other Third Party services. AIM is included because Bebo was bought by AOL and owns AIM.

Bebo Chat

A new service called Bebo Chat, was launched with several other updates in 2011, which allows users to chat to other users. using a Meebo chat plugin, but with Bebo branding. Users can also update their 'Saying' and show their availability status, as well as have access to other links to Bebo's pages, and special offers. It also provides a link for users to visit Bebo's fan page on Facebook, where they can 'Like' their page and receive updates.

Bebo System

Bebo is known to run on servers running the Resin Operating System whilst making use of the Oracle Database system. It is estimated that Bebo has somewhere between 5000 and 8000 Phantom4 servers provided by Rackable Systems and has over 100TB of disk space across all of their servers.

Open Media Platform

Announced on the November 13, 2007, Bebo's Open Media Platform is a platform for companies to distribute content to the Bebo community. Content providers can bring their media player to Bebo, and monetize the advertising within it. Each content provider has a specialised page designed for video which showcases any Adobe Flash video content at the top of the profile. Many networks are signed up for the service, including CBS, Sky, Ustream.tv, BBC and Last.fm.

Open application platform

Bebo joined OpenSocial, a set of common APIs for building social applications across the web. It announced plans for a developers platform and said it will make a further platform announcement. Bebo's Open Application Platform was launched in early December 2007 with just over fifty applications and is now host to hundreds.

Many members disliked the new applications created with the profile and asked Bebo to remove them.[16] One of the main complaints was it made it easy for application developers to provide a way for members to send invites to all their friends on Bebo and many applications encouraged users to do so. A poll was held on the Bebo developers page and had a majority against apps.[17]

Privacy and security

Bebo offers three privacy levels: public, private and fully private. Public profiles can be seen by any user, except that profiles of users younger than sixteen years old are seen only by logged in users. Private profiles are seen only by their friends and members of any school or college they have joined. Fully private profiles are ones that have not joined any school and so only their direct friends can view their profile. If a user chooses the 'Public' option, they can also set age restrictions on who can contact them. Age restrictions do not apply to direct friends. Bebo also allows a user to set their photos to private, so only friends can see them and can stop others from copying them too. Most users disliked Bebo's privacy settings and in feedback to Bebo have been told to update it to Facebook-like settings.

Inadvertent privacy breach by New Zealand ISP

On May 21, 2008 some users in New Zealand were temporarily given full access to other users' accounts.[18] Various users logged in under their own account were switched over to the accounts of other users at random intervals, some people gaining access to over 20 different users' accounts. People were sometimes given access to addresses and phone numbers of other members, and some took advantage of the situation by uploading pornography onto other members' accounts.[19] Bebo network engineers traced the error to a mis-configured proxy server in an Internet service provider (ISP) in New Zealand, which was later fixed. The ISP seemed to be interfering with its cache, thereby causing some of its customers to receive cached cookies and details from other users, likely because the ISP used dynamic IP addresses.

New Bebo

Possible closure and sale

On April 7, 2010, AOL announced that they were either going to sell the website,[20] or shut it down. This was mainly due to the falling numbers of unique users; Bebo users were moving to the social giants Facebook and Twitter. AOL said that Bebo couldn't compete with other Social Networking sites at its current state, and that was the reason they were going to sell it and that they couldn't commit to taking on the massive task to keep Bebo in the social network 'race'. It has been reported that AOL's finances were struggling.

Criterion Capital Partners ownership transfer

On June 16, 2010, it was reported that AOL had sold Bebo to hedge fund operators Criterion Capital Partners.[21] The purchase was confirmed[22] on June 17, 2010.

Revamp

On February 17, 2011, Bebo launched a brand-new design. This consisted of a new more modern Header, a new more modernized Home page and a New Profile Layout Option. Further, users can now see who has visited their profiles (a feature which can be changed in settings).

In April, Bebo added a new Notification system, similar to Facebook's. It notifies users on new inbox messages, lifestream activity and more. This was a feature which was heavily asked for in feedback.

Usage

The website, at its height of popularity, overtook Myspace to become the most widely used social networking website in the United Kingdom,[23][24] eventually registering at least 10.7 million unique users. The website became mired in similar controversies in the UK as those which beset Myspace in the United States and other countries at the time. The site was particularly popular with Irish users – at one point it claimed to have over a million Irish users, and data from Alexa ranked it as Ireland most-visited site.

Roleplay

To a certain extent, Bebo is used for roleplaying characters from various television programs, movies and novels. These Bebo character profiles are created and maintained by individuals, similar to a virtual world profile. Examples of the more common fictional chronicles mimicked on the site include Stargate, The Twilight Saga, The Vampire Diaries, One Tree Hill, Supernatural, Harry Potter, James Bond, Merlin, Gor, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Torchwood and Doctor Who. Anime and manga series such as Naruto, Bleach, One Piece and Dragon Ball are also popular franchises which are roleplayed, as well as games such as Resident Evil, Tomb Raider, and comics from both Marvel Comics and DC Universe. The profiles are most commonly set up in Bebo's 'classic-layout' and have the characters name at the top, a quotation from the character and a Wikipedia style biography of the character.

Also, people create their own characters which are known as 'non-canons'. These can be made up characters from an existing TV programme or film, or just a figment of their own imagination with no fixed genre. 'Non-Canons' are characters created by individuals, also known as "OCs" (Original Characters.) A large majority of the roleplaying on Bebo contains original characters, and Bebo became the home of roleplaying to the majority of roleplayers on the site.

The phenomenon is something that Bebo staff appears to be unaware of. Even though, while it's not easy to say how may accounts there are, a very high percentage (at least approaching half) of the websites are roleplay accounts and one of the most popular groups on the site is "Roleplay for Sale",[25] a website where someone can give up an old account or ask someone to make an account for them.

The phenomenon was mentioned in an article from Sugar Magazine about online roleplaying, which gave several teenage girls’ angle on different websites used for online roleplay. There is also a WikiHow article entitled "How to Be a Bebo Roleplayer" about how to set up a roleplay account on Bebo[26] and another entitled "How to Be the Best Bebo Roleplayer You Can Be".[27]

The style of roleplaying on Bebo is notably different from the style of roleplaying on other social websites, such as Tumblr - which also has a roleplaying community. On Bebo, it is mainly common for users to have one character per account, or an account with multiple characters. Rather than using applications and being accepted into set storylines, Bebo users "freestyle" or create their own storyline together. On Bebo, it is also common for roleplays to be between two separate users, rather than in groups unless intended on Bebo Group pages.

Many roleplayers on Bebo submit photo edits to their accounts - usually done with photo manipulating software like Photoscape or Photofiltre. The edits usually contain the roleplayer's account URL, character's names, phrases, additional decorations and flashing effects if the image is in GIF form, some people even make mor complex edits using Photoshop. Photo edits set out as panels are often used to show a small bit of conversation between two characters or part of a character's story, these are called "Stacks".

Rumored shutdown

On January 30, 2012, access to the Bebo site was unavailable. Anyone who went to Bebo.com would be given a failure notice. Former CEO and now Technical consultant to Bebo, Michael Birch expressed his sadness over Bebo's demise[28] before saying that the site would come back online within a few hours. A Bebo spokesperson told TechCrunch that the site was down due to "a technical clusterfuck".[29] Bebo resumed normal service during the early hours of February 1, 2012. CEO of Bebo and Criterion Capital Partners Adam Levin, personally posted a Blog on Bebo Backstage explaining why the site was offline. It is stated that they were trying to release some new features and caused the site to crash. It is not explained how exactly the site crashed although it is presumed that an update might have contained incorrect code which caused the servers to malfunction. It appears that no data was lost as a result of the outage and the servers are functioning normally. Spurred by the belief that Bebo was gone for good, the hashtag #bebomemories trended worldwide on Twitter.[30] Despite Bebo coming back on-line, there were still some Twitter users using the #RIPBebo hashtag at the time.

References

  1. ^ a b c Burkeman, Oliver (2006-11-04). "Bebo, Michael and Xochi Birch". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
  2. ^ Worthen, Ben (2010-07-13). "Meet the New Bebo". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 16 July 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-14. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ "Bebo.com – Traffic Details from Alexa" (Document). Alexa Internet, Inc. {{cite document}}: Unknown parameter |accessdate= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |url= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Michael Birch speaking on the BBC Radio 4 programme "The Bottom Line" broadcast on June 30, 2011.
  5. ^ "How to make 80 million friends and influence people", The Independent, 11 February 2011
  6. ^ FT.com / In depth - AOL to ‘supercharge’ Bebo revenues
  7. ^ "AOL acquires Bebo social network". BBC News. March 13, 2008. Archived from the original on 15 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-13. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ "AOL to 'supercharge' Bebo revenues". Financial Times. London. Archived from the original on 14 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-13. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ Kiss, Jemima (April 7, 2010). "Bebo: where did it all go wrong?". The Guardian. London.
  10. ^ McNaughton, Mathieas (2010-07-14). "The Rise and Fall of Bebo: The Video Network That Could Have Been (Part 1)". News.tubefilter.tv. Retrieved 2012-10-25.
  11. ^ Letzing, John (April 6, 2010). "AOL pulls plug on Bebo social networking effort". The Wall Street Journal. New York. Archived from the original on 11 April 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-06. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ a b "Bebo sold by AOL after just two years". BBC News. June 17, 2010. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-17. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "AOL Sells Bebo to Criterion for Less Than $10 Million". Bloomberg Businessweek. June 17, 2010. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-18. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ Bebo Not Worth a Pail of Spit to AOL? This Comes as a Shock to Exactly–Hmm–No One.
  15. ^ Group Surf
  16. ^ "A group petitioning for the removal of Bebo Apps".
  17. ^ "Poll on apps at the Bebo official page".
  18. ^ "Glitch opens Bebo users' private details to others".
  19. ^ "Bebo's HUGE error".
  20. ^ AOL planning to sell Bebo
  21. ^ AOL To Sell Bebo to Criterion Capital Partners
  22. ^ Criterion Capital Partners Acquires Bebo from AOL
  23. ^ Steve O'Hear (August 14, 2007). "Bebo overtakes MySpace in the UK". ZDNet.
  24. ^ Jessi Hempel (September 19, 2007). "Bebo's British invasion". Fortune.
  25. ^ "Profile from Roleplay For Sale" (in Template:Us icon). bebo.com. Retrieved 2012-10-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  26. ^ "How to Be a Bebo Roleplayer: 11 steps". wikiHow. 2010-11-18. Retrieved 2012-10-25.
  27. ^ "How to Be the Best Bebo Roleplayer You Can Be: 7 steps". wikiHow. 2012-01-31. Retrieved 2012-10-25.
  28. ^ @mickbirch. "Birch's #RIPbebo tweet". Twitter. Retrieved January 30, 2012.
  29. ^ Ha, Anthony (January 30, 2012). "Is Bebo Finally Dead? (Update: Not Quite)". TechCrunch.
  30. ^ McCarra, Darren (January 30, 2012). "Bebo may have just shutdown". The Sociable.