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Vimeo

Vimeo, LLC
TypeSubsidiary, limited liability company
Foundation dateNovember 2004 as Vimeo Hometek LTD.
2011 as Vimeo, LLC
HeadquartersNew York City, New York, United States
Area servedWorldwide
Founder(s)Zach Klein, Jake Lodwick
Key peopleKerry Trainor (CEO), Dae Mellencamp (President)
OwnerIAC (2006–present)
WebsiteVimeo.com
Alexa ranknegative increase 132 (February 2013[update])[1]
Type of siteVideo hosting service
AdvertisingIAC Advertising
RegistrationOptional
Available inEnglish, Spanish, German, French
Current statusActive (Servers are currently up)[2]

Vimeo /ˈvɪmi/[3] is a U.S.-based video-sharing website on which users can upload, share and view videos.[4] It was founded by Jake Lodwick and Zach Klein in November 2004. They left the company in 2007[5] and 2008 respectively. The name Vimeo was created by Lodwick and is a play on the word video, inserting the word "me" as a reference to the site's dedication to user-made video and is also an anagram of the word "movie".[6]

IAC/InterActiveCorp purchased Vimeo in August 2006, as part of its acquisition of Connected Ventures.[7] In January 2009, Mellencamp joined IAC as General Manager of Vimeo.[8] She served as the CEO of Vimeo until March 19, 2012 when Kerry Trainor joined Vimeo as the CEO.[9]

Jakob Lodwick and Zach Klein, founders of Vimeo

Contents

Popularity

As of December 2011[update], Vimeo attracts 65 million unique visitors per month and more than 8 million registered users.[10] Fifteen percent of Vimeo’s traffic comes from mobile devices.[11]

Community

The community of Vimeo includes indie filmmakers and their fans.[12] The Vimeo community has adopted the name "Vimeans", meaning a member of the Vimeo community, usually one who is active and engaged with fellow users on a regular basis.[13]

Notable content

Numerous popular entertainers have used Vimeo to host content. In 2009, Britney Spears used Vimeo as a platform to premier the music video for her single Radar.[citation needed]

The White House posts high-definition versions of its broadcasts to Vimeo.[14]

Vimeo has helped to offload traffic from Improv Everywhere's servers after new pranks are announced, and continues to host most of their videos. Vimeo was also the original location of Noah Kalina's "everyday" video,[15] a popular viral video.

Video quality

On October 9, 2007, Vimeo announced support for High Definition playback in 1280x720 (720p), becoming the first video sharing site to support consumer HD.[16] Uploaded HD videos were automatically converted into 720/30p VP6 Flash video. Since August 2010, all videos are encoded into H.264 for HTML5 support. All videos uploaded before were re-encoded. Non-HD videos re-encode at a maximum of 30 frame/s and they also have significantly higher bitrates than other competing video sharing sites. Non-Plus users can upload up to 500 MB of videos per week, and up to one HD video per week (additional HD videos uploaded within the same week are encoded to SD).

Vimeo Plus

On October 16, 2008, Vimeo unveiled its $60-per-year 'Vimeo Plus' package, which allows users additional weekly uploads (up to 5 GB), unlimited HD videos, unlimited creation of channels, groups and albums, no ads, HD embeds, 2-pass video re-encoding that results in higher quality, priority encoding, and more. The arrival of Vimeo Plus also meant the downgrade of the free version, which up to that point also enjoyed unlimited HD re-encodings per week and unlimited creation of groups/albums/channels.

Since February 2010, Plus users can choose to re-encode their 1080p upload as either 1080p or 720p. As of July 22, 2010, the site offers unlimited HD embeds.[17] As of January 4, 2011, Vimeo Plus users can upload videos that are up to five gigabytes of footage, roughly equivalent to 2.5 hours of HD video.[18] This makes it possible for full length, high-definition feature films to be uploaded to Vimeo by Vimeo Plus users.

Vimeo PRO

On August 1, 2011, Vimeo introduced the PRO account type for business and commercial use, which allows 50GB of storage, 250k plays, advanced analytics, third party video player support and more.

Everyone except "small scale independent production companies, non-profits, and artists who want to use the Vimeo Service to showcase or promote their own creative works"[19] must become Vimeo PRO subscribers in order to upload commercial videos or use Vimeo for their business's video hosting needs.

Vimeo Awards

Vimeo's first annual Vimeo Awards took place October 8-9, 2010 in New York City, dedicated towards showcasing and awarding creative video content hosted on the site.[20] Festival judges for the nine competitive categories included David Lynch, Morgan Spurlock, Rian Johnson, M.I.A., and Charlie White.[21] The competition received over 6500 entries. Winners were chosen for each category, with the documentary finalist "Last Minutes with Oden" taking home the $25,000 grand prize. Ben Briand's short narrative "Apricot" won the Community Choice Award. The two-day festival included video screenings and workshops from the likes of Philip Bloom, Lawrence Lessig, and DJ Spooky, and an award show hosted by Ze Frank. A 3D projection-mapping displayed on the Vimeo HQ/IAC building concluded the festival. The 2012 Vimeo Festival+Awards commenced on the 8th of June and included speakers like Ed Burns, Loc Dao, Vincent Laforet and Jonathan Gottschall.

Gaming videos deletion

On July 21, 2008, Vimeo announced that for several reasons they would no longer allow gaming videos, one reason being that:

"Gaming videos are by nature significantly larger and longer than any other genre on Vimeo. Over these last few months they have been the single biggest reasons for our transcoder wait times."
—Blake Whitman, Community Director[22]

Existing gaming videos were deleted on September 1, 2008. All new uploads are currently subject to this rule.

However, machinima videos with a story of their own are still permitted.[23]

Censorship and Controversies

Starting 4 May 2012, the site has been blocked in India by some ISPs under orders from the Department of Telecom, without any stated reasons.[24][25]

See also

  • Perbandingan -- video services

References

  1. ^ "Vimeo.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2013-02-03. 
  2. ^ "Vimeo.com Server Status Check". isitdownrightnow.com. Retrieved 16 January 2013. 
  3. ^ "How do I pronounce Vimeo? in Vimeo FAQs". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2012-02-12. 
  4. ^ IAC. "Vimeo". Retrieved 1/31/12. 
  5. ^ Liz Gannes (10/30/07). "Vimeo Founder Jakob Lodwick Leaves". GigaOm. Retrieved 1/31/12. 
  6. ^ Danny Allen (8/21/07). "Vimeo video-sharing service review". PC World. Retrieved 28 September 2010. 
  7. ^ "Acquisition and Divestitures Timeline". IAC. Retrieved 1/31/12. 
  8. ^ "ManagementBios". IAC. Retrieved 1/31/12. 
  9. ^ "IAC replaces Vimeo CEO with former AOL exec Kerry Trainor". 
  10. ^ Sean Ludwig (1/24/12). "Vimeo begins rolling out silky smooth redesign with huge videos". VentureBeat. Retrieved 2/1/12. 
  11. ^ Sean Ludwig (1/9/12). "Vimeo shows slick new video apps for Android, Windows Phone, iPhone, iPad and iStone". VentureBeat. Retrieved 2/1/12. 
  12. ^ Vimeo et. al. (N/A). "The Best Indie Filmmakers". Vimeo. Retrieved March 25, 2012. 
  13. ^ Vimeo (2011). "Hey Vimeans!". Tumblr. Retrieved March 25, 2012. 
  14. ^ Uploaded 1 day ago (2008-12-09). "The White House on Vimeo". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2013-02-14. 
  15. ^ by Noah K. "''everyday'' by Noah Kalina on Vimeo". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2012-01-01. 
  16. ^ Lauria, Peter. New York Post [New York, N.Y] (16 Oct 2007) "Video-Sharing Web Site Goes High-Def"
  17. ^ by dalas verdugo July 22, 2010 (2010-07-22). "Global Settings and Unlimited HD Embedding". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2012-01-01. 
  18. ^ "Gizmodo.com". Gizmodo.com. 2011-01-05. Retrieved 2012-01-01. 
  19. ^ "Vimeo PRO Guidelines". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2012-03-12. 
  20. ^ "Vimeo Awards". 
  21. ^ "Vimeo Award judges". 
  22. ^ Blake Whitman, "New upload rules", Staff blog, vimeo.com, 21 July 2008. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  23. ^ "Community Guidelines". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2012-01-01. 
  24. ^ Ernesto (May 04, 2012). "India Orders Blackout of Vimeo, The Pirate Bay and More". TorrentFreak. Retrieved May 05, 2012. 
  25. ^ Vikas SN (May 04, 2012). "Reliance Communications Blocks The Pirate Bay & Vimeo". Medianama. Retrieved May 10, 2012. 

External links

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