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Type of site | Search engine |
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Available in | English |
Owner | HotBot Limited |
URL | www |
Commercial | Yes |
Launched | May 27, 1996; 28 years ago (1996-05-27) |
Current status | Working |
HotBot is a Canadianweb search engine owned byHotBot Limited, whose key principal isKristen Richardson. The search engine was initially launched in North America in 1996 byWired magazine. During the 1990s, it was one of the most popular search engines on theWorld Wide Web. The domain was sold in 2016 and was used for other unrelated purposes for several years. Hotbot search engine was relaunched in 2022 under new ownership and with a different technology.[1]
HotBot was launched in May 1996 byWired online divisionHotWired, as a tool providing search results served by theInktomi database. The search engine was co-developed by Inktomi, a four-month-old start-up staffed byUniversity of California, Berkeley students.[2] HotBot was launched using a "new links" strategy of marketing, claiming to index the entire web weekly, more often than competitors likeAltaVista,[3] and its website stated it being the "most complete Web index online" with 54 million documents.[4] Its colorful interface and impressive features (e.g. being able to search with any entered words, or an entire phrase) drew acclaim and popularity.[5]
Directory results were provided originally byLookSmart and thenDMOZ from mid-1999.[6] HotBot also used search data fromDirect Hit Technologies for a period starting February 1999,[7] which was a tool that used click-through data to manipulate results. Inktomi's Smart Crawl technology, allowing 10 million webpages to be crawled weekly, was incorporated into HotBot in March 1997.[8] HotBot was the 19th most visited website based on web traffic as of 1998.[9]
Lycos acquired HotBot as part of its acquisition ofWired in October 1998 and it was run separately, alongside Lycos's already existing search engine.[10] Hereafter, HotBot languished with limited development and falling market share. A HotBotNeoPlanet browser was also released which integrated HotBot and other Wired and Lycos links.[11] At the end of 2002, HotBot was relaunched as a multiple option search tool, giving users the option to search either theFAST, Google,Inktomi orTeoma databases.[12][13]
In March 2004, Lycos launched a beta release of a free toolbar search product, Lycos HotBot DeskTop, which the company said was "the first product to integrate traditional desktop search with Web search within the browser." The HotBot DeskTop could search the Internet using Inktomi, e-mail folders forMicrosoft Outlook orOutlook Express, and user documents stored on a hard drive. It also incorporated a blocker for pop-up ads and anRSS News Reader syndication. Indexes created to track e-mail and user files remained stored locally to protect user privacy. Text-based ads were displayed when viewing results for several types of Internet searches. Lycos licenseddtSearch technology to power the local search options.[14]
In July 2011, HotBot was relaunched with a new robot-like mascot, a new logo, and a modern site design. In the beta, HotBot became a portal, returning not just web search results, but also searches from various Lycos websites, such as News, Shopping andWeather Zombie. The portal interface lasted for roughly six months, and these features were instead reincorporated into the 2012 Lycos website redesign, returning HotBot to a simplified search interface.
In October 2016, Lycos sold the Hotbot.comdomain name for $155,000 to an unnamed buyer.[15] Afterwards, the HotBot domain became home to an unrelated shopping search site, ending the 20-year history of the original site.
In April 2018, the domain was put under new ownership and became an unrelated privacy-focused search engine.
As of 2020, the HotBot domain is controlled by aVPN company based inSeychelles.[16][17]
In 2023 the aforementioned VPN company pivoted to offering an AI based web-search feature, inspired by however not officially affiliated with the domain's original usage in 1996.[18]