| Google Sites | |
|---|---|
Screenshot of the editing mode in the New Google Sites. | |
| Developer | |
| Initial release | February 28, 2008; 17 years ago (2008-02-28) |
| Platform | Web |
| Type | Website creation |
| Website | sites (New version) sites (Classic) |
Google Sites is a structuredwiki andweb page creation tool included as part of the free,web-basedGoogle Docs Editors suite offered byGoogle. The service includesGoogle Docs,Google Sheets,Google Slides,Google Drawings,Google Forms, andGoogle Keep. Google Sites is only available on theweb.
Google Sites started out asJotSpot, the name and sole product of a software company that offered enterprise social software.[citation needed] It was targeted mainly at small-sized and medium-sized businesses. The company was founded byJoe Kraus and Graham Spencer, co-founders ofExcite.
In February 2006, JotSpot was named part of Business 2.0, "Next Net 25",[1] and in May 2006, it was honored as one of InfoWorld's "15 Start-ups to Watch".[2] In October 2006, JotSpot was acquired by Google.[3] Google announced a prolonged data transition of webpages created usingGoogle Page Creator (also known as "Google Pages") to Google Sites servers in 2007. On February 28, 2008, Google Sites was unveiled using the JotSpot technology.[4] The service was free, but users needed a domain name, which Google offered for $10. However, as of May 21, 2008, Google Sites became available for free, separately from Google Apps, and without the need for a domain.[5]
In June 2016, Google introduced a complete rebuild of the Google Sites platform, named theNew Google Sites,[6][7] along with transition schedule fromClassic Google Sites.[8] The new Google Sites does not use JotSpot technology.
In August 2020, the new Google Sites became the default option for website creation, while in November 2021, all websites made with classic Google Sites were archived.[9]
Following a Turkish regional court ruling in 2009, all pages hosted on Google Sites were blocked in Turkey after it was alleged that one of the pages contained an insult of Turkey's founder,Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. In 2012, theEuropean Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled the blockage a breach ofArticle 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights (Yildirim v Turkey, 2012).[10] The blockage was lifted in 2014.[11]
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