Gnip

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in Module:Infobox at line 199: malformed pattern (missing ']').

Gnip, Inc. was a social media API aggregation company. Headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, it provided data from dozens of social media websites via a single API. Calling itself the "Grand Central Station for the social web",[1] Gnip was among the first social media API aggregation services.

Gnip is known as an early influencer in building the real-time web.[1] The company has also been instrumental in defining relevant web standards: Gnip's co-founder Eric Marcoullier actively advocated for adoption of open web standards, and helped define the new Activity Streams format for web data.

Subsequent to a 2010 data licensing agreement with Twitter Inc, Twitter purchased Gnip in April 2014.[2]

History

Gnip was founded by Jud Valeski and Eric Marcoullier with an initial investment of $1 million.[3] The company was based on the premise that collecting data from many social APIs simultaneously is tedious and time-consuming. It dubbed itself the "Grand Central Station for the Social Web" shortly after launch.[1] Although the company launched with just a few basic features such as notifications,[4] the product was designed to act as an intermediary to simplify the collection of social media data.[5] The company used the tagline "making data portability suck less." [6]

By the end of 2008, Gnip had raised $3.5 million in Series B funding from investors such as the Foundry Group and First Round Capital.[7][8] The service was used for projects like collecting huge volumes of data for analyzing Twitter clients.[9]

In 2009, Gnip launched a Push API.[10] In September, Gnip underwent a significant product overhaul accompanied by an internal restructuring of resources.[11]

In 2010, Gnip launched their new and revised social media data collection product[12] and released a manual describing use cases and significance of Twitter Inc's streaming API.[13] Gnip's sources included Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, Google Buzz, Vimeo, and others.[14]

In April 2014, Gnip was acquired by Twitter for $134.1 million in mostly cash and some stock.[15]

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

Cite error: Invalid <references> tag; parameter "group" is allowed only.

Use <references />, or <references group="..." />
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Gnip: Grand Central Station for the Social Web
  2. Reuters: Twitter buys social data provider Gnip, stock soars
  3. MyBlogLog Founder To Launch New Startup Gnip With $1 Million In Funding
  4. Gnip to bridge the data divide for noisy Web services
  5. Gnip 2.0 Launches, With A Business Model
  6. Gnip is Ping Spelled Backwards
  7. Gnip Raises $3.5 Million
  8. Data-sharing service Gnip raises $3.5 million
  9. Top Twitter Clients Revealed
  10. Gnip Launches Push API To Create Real-Time Stream Of Business Data
  11. Gnip Clips 60 Percent Of Staff
  12. The Best SLA I’ve Seen In A While
  13. Gnip’s Manual On The Twitter Streaming API
  14. POPULAR SOURCES on Gnip
  15. Twitter Paid