iWiW
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iWiW (abbreviation for International Who is Who) was a Hungarian social networking web service which started on April 14, 2002 as WiW (Who Is Who). As of 2007 August[update], it had 2,6 million registered users with real names.[2] Every user could provide personal information such as the place they live, date of birth, schools and universities they attended, workplaces, interests and pets. One could find friends by a search tool or looking through one's acquaintances' acquaintances.
On October 26, 2005 the system was rebuilt from scratch and got a new name (iWiW). The most important changes were the multilingual interface (reverted to Hungarian-only as of July 2006), listings, photo upload and a special Java applet to visualize the connections.
On 28 April 2006, T-Online, the net branch of Magyar Telekom, purchased iWiW for almost one billion HUF (about 4.7 million USD). Users expressed concerns that their personal data may be sold to telemarketers or used for other purposes potentially hurting their privacy. Because of fears of abuse by the Hungarian telco giant, several iWiW clones and unrelated Hungarian social networking websites appeared or gained popularity after the take-over.
After the T-Online acquisition, the site was available only in Hungarian.
On July 18, 2006 iWiW had 1 million users and on December 18 it reached 1.5 million.
On Dec 24, 2008 the number of registered users on iWiW was 4 million, covering almost all internet users in Hungary. [3]
On 22 April 2009, 26 applications became available on iwiw.hu. By mid-2009, users could choose from 65 applications.
In April 2010 iWiW introduced a service similar to Facebook connect. This allowed users to log in to external websites using their iWiW credentials.[4]
In July 2010 iWiW introduced its mobile application for iPhone and Android. [5]
On May 15, 2014 Origo Zrt. closed down iWiW permanently on June 30, 2014.[6]
See also
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ (Hungarian) Interview with the maintainers on occasion of moving the servers
- ↑ (Hungarian) iWiW user count passed 4 million
- ↑ (Hungarian) Iwiw was not only used as a contact list but also as a passport
- ↑ (Hungarian) iWiW app released for iOS and Android
- ↑ (Hungarian)iWiW closes down
External links
- Articles with Hungarian-language external links
- Communications in Hungary
- Hungarian society
- Social networking services
- Community websites
- Virtual communities
- Internet properties established in 2002
- Internet properties disestablished in 2014
- 2002 establishments in Hungary
- 2014 disestablishments in Hungary
- Defunct websites