Now closing: GeoCities, a relic of Web's early days
Yahoo is closing its GeoCities personal home page service, and with it will go an era of self-expression on the Web that's largely been replaced by social networks and blogs.
GeoCities rose to power during an era when publishing on the Internet meant setting up your own Web site. GeoCities simplified the process by helping people sidestep the complications of registering a domain and learning how to program HTML, the language that describes Web pages.
Yahoo is closing it GeoCities site this year.
(Credit: Screenshot by Stephen Shankland/CNET)Yahoo bought GeoCities for more than $2.9 billion in dot-com-priced stock in 1999, when GeoCities had more than 1.1 million users. However, while the idea of having a personal presence on the Internet has caught on, GeoCities turned out to be a backwater, not the mainstream.
"We will be closing GeoCities later this year," Yahoo said in a note on the site. "We'll provide more details about closing GeoCities and how to save your site data this summer."
Goodbye Geocities, hello Facebook
Today, the way people choose to express themselves on the Internet is shifting away from isolated Web pages. Instead they use social-networking sites such as Facebook, with built-in features for creating a profile, staying in touch with contacts, and maintaining at least a little privacy; WordPress, where it's easy to post updates to a blog; or Flickr, where the photographically inclined can meet, share, and comment.
What these services and others including Twitter, YouTube, MySpace, and Blogger possess is a mechanism to notify interested parties of new activity, helping to keep social links pulsing with new information in a way that just can't be replicated by depending on a person to swing by a personal Web site.
That's not to say personal home pages are extinct. Google Sites is still around, and Yola, formerly SynthaSite, bought out search ads related to GeoCities searches on Thursday. But for most folks, it's easier to rely on more sophisticated pre-built services than to roll their own sites.
It's no surprise GeoCities is on the chopping block. Yahoo has its hands full trying to integrate its successful properties with the socially active parts of the Internet. The company hardly has resources to spare on last decade's trend.
Part of GeoCities' closure is related to Yahoo's circumstances. The company already was under financial pressure before the recession arrived in full force, but now things are even tighter, and new Chief Executive Carol Bartz is focusing on the company's core, successful properties--laying off about 675 employees in areas that don't pass muster.
GeoCities' vanishing sites?
Still unclear is what exactly will become of GeoCities pages. New sign-ups are already no longer permitted, but what about existing sites?
Here's how Yahoo put it: "You can continue to enjoy your Web site and GeoCities services until later this year. You don't need to change a thing right now--we just wanted you to let you know about the closure as soon as possible. We'll provide more details about closing GeoCities and how to save your site data this summer, and we will update the help center with more details at that time."
That leaves open the possibility that Yahoo will make it possible to move a site to another service, as it did when shutting down Yahoo Photos, but in the current climate, it's probably best not to expect such a graceful transition option. Yahoo wouldn't comment on its plans.
Another option is to upgrade to a separate paid Yahoo service: "You don't need to change your service today, but we encourage anyone interested in a full-featured Web hosting plan to consider upgrading to our award-winning Yahoo Web Hosting service."
But given how many GeoCities users weren't technical experts, it seems likely that a lot of amateur Web sites soon will vanish without a trace, a casualty of business priorities and the Internet's rapid changes.
Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank. 




http://jimdo.com/geocities
Sign up there and we'll keep you posted about what we're working on to smooth the transition process.
http://sites.google.com/
"That's where my Geo Cities sites will move."
No, that's where they will not. Googlesites does not support .html uploads. However, there are a large number of other possible hosts. Here are a few:
Webng.com
1hwy.com
webs.com
atspace.com
eSmartStart.com
Websamba.com
Freewebtown.com
000webhost.com
Freewebsites.com
Hostrator.com
All of these allow .html uploads, and reasonably close to full control over the design of one's page. (One doesn't get to suppress ads).
Googlesites and Yola? Is the author serious? I know that the first has forced template usage on every page. The second is designed for first time users who don't know HTML, the basics of which can be aquired by anybody with ease in much less than a single afternoon. It's as if he were writing an article about the different varieties of bicycles one might purchase, and declined to mention even one that one could buy without having any training wheels attached.
Actually it would be a fine service for a different use -- it would replace what I have on Pagii just fine, and I may eventually move my Pagii pages there as Pagii has gone downhill recently, but for hosting a custom homepage written in HTML or CSS, it won't work. It isn't set up to do that. No writing your own code here...
I deleted my Jimdo account within about 20 minutes of making it. Totally won't work for my purposes, and I found their "just migrate your page" very misleading.
Still looking for a new free host for my tiny spot on the web.
Yahoo itself is a dinosaur. If they would've kept doing search properly, Google would've never emerged as a strong competitor.
Rather than do researches on a topic and doing site structures, they prefer to go with the simpler line of blogging instead.
Most sites now that still looks like the old times are probably corporate's internet presence sites.
Off into the sunset GeoCities goes to join previous travelers such as Prodigy, GEnie, and even Netcom (is netcom even still around?)
Geocities was at its best when it was a small community-like deal, with neighborhoods and streets and whatnot, where the CEO would post messages on the site. It was like a web version of eWorld (remember that???). When Yahoo bought it, it went straight downhill.
Didn't Netcom end up going to Flashcom or Earthlink or one of those companies?
Geocities had a good intention, but poor implementation, and after no focus on keeping it current with the times, I'm surprised it's taken them this long to bring it down. Actually until this article I had no idea it was still in existence. I thought surely they had used their 360 software as heir to the throne, so to speak.
Just let it stay for existing users.
Interestingly, myspace has invested millions in providing the modern day equivalent. The result? A collection of mismatched, gaudy & difficult to read websites.
To be honest I think the old GeoCities sites were better than 90% of myspace sites. It's actually quite visually & audibly offensive when visiting someones myspace. I liken the "myspace experience" to going home with a tramp to his cardboard shelter down by the railway tracks & admiring his garden of dead dogs.
We'd all be better off if they just wiped the myspace servers clean & gave all the users some html training, ftp software, some clean clothes & a hot bowl of soup.
The fact that may startle those making condescending commentary about Geocities websites is that Google consistently ranks my free geocities.com/maya-gaia website in the first page out of a total sometimes as high as 2M hits of hundreds of esoteric terms- way ahead of blogger or wordpress. My angelfire.com/real-gaia also gets fair ranking. I'll sadly feel the pain when Geocities finally goes down as I was there in 1997 before Yahoo aquired it.
I think web site is much more than just a blog with links to youtube and other sites. usually you are not getting FTP services, can't use any site for backup purposes.
I think all geocities current users (and home.aol.com users too) will enjoy http://www.freewebtown.com service. Simple and has very rich functionality. Unlike social networking sites which are based on legitimate spam, this site is just serves the customers.
http://www.tripod.lycos.com/
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Webmasters/thread?tid=312316da97bc712a&hl=en
It took Google less than a week to start reindexing pages from geocities to angelfire and am getting 2-3 times better ranking in Google search now than previously. Also Google is presenting second-tier indexing to "more angelfire" like they did for geocities which I assume will be more frequent if more webpages relocate to angelfire and raise its Alexa ranking.
Pretty much the only thing that GeoCities was used for in the last couple years was pages for spammers and scam artists.
I still remember working for hours to get a rotating picture marquee working. Ahh the 90s what a great time!
Still, yeah, there's a good number of extremely small websites that are hosted by GeoCities. Now those are gone, and that's stupid on Yahoo!'s part. I don't think leaving a few servers on in a dark corner would've killed anybody.
http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/6303/index.html
Yes, the majority of sites on GeoCities were terrible to look at but that's definitely part of the charm - normal people using whatever tools were available to reach an audience, join a community or just share their interests. They were labors of love. Especially to see them now, years past without updates, ghost towns of websites long forgotten by their creators, is in itself an interesting internet archive.
GeoCities, you will be missed. :(
So when are they going to just shut down all of yahoo. Talk about a relic...
Cody
It seemed pretty slick at the time for someone in a small town in the South to have a site hosted in far away Beverly Hills. :)
Tripod.com is another good free Web hosting site, and it's still there, though now part of Lycos. (Which makes me think it might not be there for long.)
I still have and use a free Tripod.com key chain/bottle opener I got as a promotional item from them.
People really cared about the service back then, and fought for changes to the watermark when it first came out (and later, TOS changes from Yahoo! during the Geocities integration), but when Yahoo! started doing that big white slider with all the ads, that's when you knew the service wasn't going to last. But honestly, Yahoo! just continued the path Geocities started, and I think the user exodus began before Yahoo's time.
One of the leaders behind the anti-watermark movement, who ID'd himself as AlterIcon, was a great guy, and we still chat occasionally... the remnants of his site are even still online today, although not for long:
http://www.geocities.com/PicketFence/1284/oldindex.htm
I am saddened for the service going away, as it served its purpose for the time, but glad for the friends I made from it.
- by JCPayne April 23, 2009 8:47 PM PDT
- Looks like Microsoft will get their search only-deal after all.....
- Like this Reply to this comment
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Showing 1 of 3 pages (56 Comments)The Yahoo CEO seems prepared to kill off everything other than search and then turn over babelfish, altavista, overture and all the rest over to Microsoft in the end.