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Internet Brands

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American new media company in California

MH Sub I, LLC
Headquarters in El Segundo
Internet Brands
Company typePrivate
Nasdaq: INET
IndustryInternet media
FoundedJune 27, 1998; 27 years ago (1998-06-27)[1] (asCarsDirect)
HeadquartersEl Segundo, California, U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Robert Brisco (president) &CEO)
ProductsConsumerwebsites;software applications
Owner
Websitewww.internetbrands.com

MH Sub I, LLCd/b/a Internet Brands is adigital media, marketing services, and software company based inEl Segundo, California, United States, that operates onlinemedia,community,e-commerce, andSaaS businesses invertical markets. Its largest businesses are in online health and legal services. The company's website indicates that it employs more than 7,000 people globally.

Businesses

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WebMD and Medscape

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The company acquired its largest businesses,WebMD andMedscape, in a $2.8 billion transaction in 2017.[2] In 2018, WebMD acquired Frontline Communications and Jobson.[3][4] In 2019, WebMD acquired Aptus Health fromMerck.[5] In 2020, WebMD acquired: StayWell and Krames, also from Merck; and Germany-based Coliquio.[6][7] In 2021, WebMD acquiredADDitude and the Wellness Network.[8][9] In 2022, WebMD acquired Mercury Health Care, a spinout ofHealthgrades.[10] Also in 2022, WebMD acquired Jim.fr, a medical news and information website for physicians based in France.[11][12] In 2023, Internet Brands acquired Limeade, a digital health and wellness platform,[13][14] as well as Grupo Saned, a health and medical information services company in Spain.[15] In 2024, WebMD acquired the operating assets ofHealthwise, a provider of patient health education materials.[16][17]

Legal Division

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The company's legal division serves consumers and attorneys and includesFindLaw,Avvo,Martindale Hubbell, andNolo.[18][19] Its services and platforms for attorneys were collectively rebranded Martindale-Avvo in 2018.[20] The company's Martindale Hubbell ownership originated in 2013 as a Joint Venture withLexisNexis, though the Martindale business traces its roots to 1868.[21][22]

In October 2024,Thomson Reuters announced it would sell online legal information providerFindLaw to Internet Brands.[23] The transaction was completed in December 2024.[24]

PulsePoint

[edit]

The company acquired PulsePoint, aprogrammatic online ad tech company, in 2021.[25]

Dental Division

[edit]

Internet Brands andHenry Schein formed a joint venture in 2018, called Henry Schein One (HS1), contributing the dental software and internet businesses of both companies.[26] In 2019, HS1 acquired Lighthouse 360. In 2020, HS1 acquiredUnited Kingdom-basedDentally.[27] In 2021, HS1 acquired Jarvis Analytics.[28]

Consumer Internet division

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As of its 2009 public filings, the consumer internet division owned and operated more than 95 websites in seven categories and attracted more than 62 millionunique visitors per month, with 97% of the audience originating from organic, non-paid sources.[29][30][31] The company's strategy is to focus on specifictarget audiences that tend to be attractive to advertisers.[32][33]

In 2016, the company acquiredFodor's travel, which was joined with other travel properties such asWikitravel andFlyerTalk.[34]

On December 1, 2010, Internet Brands acquired AllLaw.com and AttorneyLocate.com, both founded by Arvind A. Raichur.[35]

In 2007, the company acquiredCorvette Forum and in 2004, aChevy Corvette enthusiast site.

SEC filings indicate that approximately 70% of the company's revenues are derived from advertising from more than 40,000 accounts—most of themsmall and medium enterprises.

The company's portfolio of websites include many withsocial media features:social network services,user generated content,blogs,wikis, andinternet forums.[36][37]

History

[edit]

The company was founded in 1998 as CarsDirect.com, launched from thebusiness incubator Idealab. The company invented a consumer-advocacy approach to sellingcars "haggle-free" online, an approach it continues to employ.[38] In 2000,Roger Penske invested in the company and joined the Board of Directors. That same year, the company was the title sponsor of the2000 CarsDirect.com 400, an event in theNASCAR Winston Cup Series, to bring attention to online car buying. In 2002,Time Magazine voted the site one of the 50 best in the world.[39]

The company changed its name to Internet Brands in 2005.[40] The company'sIPO was in November 2007 on the NASDAQ exchange.[41] INET was added to the NASDAQ Internet Index on March 22, 2010.[42]

Internet Brands agreed to be acquired for $640 million by theprivate equity firmHellman & Friedman in September 2010[43][44] and was thus delisted from NASDAQ.[45]

In September 2012, Internet Brands became involved in a legal battle with theWikimedia Foundation (the operators ofWikipedia) over the future ofWikitravel's community.[46][47][48]

Internet Brands was acquired in June 2014 byKKR fromHellman & Friedman for 1.1 billion dollars.[49] KKR is making its investment in partnership with Internet Brands chief executive officer Bob Brisco and the Internet Brands management team, who will hold a minority stake in the company and continue to run the business.[50]

In January 2016,Intuit Inc. announced an agreement to sell Demandforce to Internet Brands.[51]

Controversies

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vBulletin criticism

[edit]

In October 2009, Internet Brands changed the pricing structure for itsvBulletin software, prompting complaints from registered users on the official forums. According toThe Register those who complained were then banned from both the forums and from receiving support and updates, despite still having valid licences for the product.[52] Internet Brands defended their position toThe Register in a separate article; however, a later update to the same article stated that at least some of Internet Brands' claims were false.[53] In October 2010, Internet Brands announced that it would file a lawsuit against theXenForo team claimingcopyright infringement; specifically that code in XenForo was based on vBulletin code,breach of contract, and engaging inunfair business practices.[54] In November 2010, Internet Brands sued Kier Darby, a lead developer of XenForo, who had previously served as a lead developer for Internet Brands' vBulletin, claiming that Kier had not returned confidential information from Internet Brands regarding the vBulletin software. The XenForo team has denied the claims.[55] In February 2013, the lawsuit was dismissed.[56]

Wikitravel and Wikimedia

[edit]
See also:Wikitravel § Community fork in 2012, andWikivoyage § History

In 2012, after a lengthy history of dissatisfaction, community members at Internet Brands-owned websiteWikitravel began discussing whether tofork (split off) of their work and editing activities fromWikitravel and recommence their editing activities at another website host.[57][58] The dissatisfaction related to long standing discontent at poor hosting, poor site updates, and excessive over-monetarization and advertising, and eventually, interference by Internet Brands in the community's activities in breach of prior agreements and understandings.[59]

Forking is a normal or anticipated activity in wiki communities and is permitted by the Creative Commons license in use on sites such as Wikitravel, andthe wiki software used by Wikitravel included the facility to take 'database "dumps"' for that purpose.[59] This mirrored the fork of the German and Italian language Wikitravel communities some years earlier, which led to a new travel wiki site calledWikivoyage. Members of the communities concerned decided that the community at Wikitravel would move its editing efforts to merge with Wikivoyage, to create a new travel wiki to be hosted by theWikimedia Foundation, the owner ofWikipedia and a large range of othernon-profit reference sites based upon awiki community.[60][61][62][63]

The merge and move were endorsed by the editing community,[64] but opposed by Internet Brands who litigated against two users it accused of unlawful actions related to the proposal. The allegations were strongly rejected by the individuals and the (non-party) Wikimedia Foundation who stated the case was an example of aSLAPP lawsuit intended to deter and frustrate lawful conduct.[65] On November 19, 2012, the claims by Internet Brands were dismissed by theUnited States District Court for the Central District of California.[66]

Greenlight Financial Services

[edit]

In April 2013, on behalf of its client Greenlight Financial Services, Inc., the Rhema Law Group won a jury verdict trial against Internet Brands, Inc. The Orange County Superior Court jury found that Internet Brands breached a previous settlement agreement between the parties and awarded lost profits damages in the amount of $750,000.[67]

Model Mayhem

[edit]

ModelMayhem.com is a social media website where models can create profiles and publish pictures. In May 2008, Internet Brands bought Model Mayhem from the original developers Donald and Tyler Waitt.[68] Model Mayhem was involved in the court caseJane Doe No. 14 v. Internet Brands, Inc., where litigants argued that Model Mayhem was liable for damages resulting from crimes committed by users on the website.[68][69][70]

References

[edit]
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External links

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