StudiVZ

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StudiVZ
Type Private
Founded Germany
(October 2005)
Founder Ehssan Dariani (CEO) & Dennis Bemmann
Headquarters Germany Berlin, Germany
Revenue ?
Employees over 200[1] (July 2009)
Website www.studivz.net
Alexa rank 173
Type of site Social network
Registration required
Available in German
Launched November 2005
Current status active

StudiVZ is a social networking platform for students (in particular for college and university students in Europe), based in Berlin, Germany. The name is an abbreviation of the German expression Studentenverzeichnis, which means students' directory.

The service is largely comparable to other social networking sites. StudiVZ claims to be one of the biggest social networks in Europe, with (reportedly) over 15.000.000 members as of September 2009,[1] mostly in the German-speaking countries; Germany, Switzerland and Austria.

Contents

[edit] History

The network was launched in October 2005 by two students from Berlin named Ehssan Dariani (CEO) and Dennis Bemmann,[1] and was financed by the founding investor Lukasz Gadowski. In the meantime, they have collected an undisclosed sum of investments by the media group called Holtzbrinck, the Samwer brothers (founders of the ringtone vendor Jamba!) and other people. In fall 2006, similar services have been launched in France (StudiQG), Italy (StudiLN), Spain (EstudiLN) and Poland (StudentIX). In February 2007, SchülerVZ, another version especially for high school students with reportedly almost three million members, was launched.[1]

In January 2007, StudiVZ was sold to one of its investors, Verlagsgruppe Georg von Holtzbrinck, a German publishing group which owns publishing companies worldwide, without any official figures given. Speculations vary from 20 to "over 100 million euros". In February 2008, another version for people who are not students was launched. It is called meinVZ.

[edit] Features

StudiVZ provides several features for its members. Students are able to keep and maintain a personal page containing information about their name, age, study subjects, interests, courses and group memberships within StudiVZ. They have the option to upload photographs on their personal pages. Through the search function, former classmates, fellow students, learning partners or people with the same interests can be found. The latter are often organized in groups within StudiVZ. These groups have their own pages and a discussion forum open to group members. Additionally, StudiVZ provides a private messaging service for its members, including a birthday reminder for people on their friends list.

The German Blogosphere says that "StudiVZ has the greatest server cluster in Europe after Google in London and that the whole page uses only one database for all requests."[citation needed]

[edit] Criticism

The site's most common criticism is its strong similarity to Facebook; Dariani admits that his site is based on it. Except for some additional features such as seeing who most recently visited one's profile, the most notable differences are linguistic, with German replacements for English feature names. Facebook's "poke" has been named "gruscheln", for example.[2] Some of the error messages reveal that one of the folders on the site is called "Fakebook", indicating that the developers were well aware of the similarities.[3] Another difference is that while searching users; sometimes a Captcha has to be entered to view search results.

In early November 2006, StudiVZ gained some notoriety outside its realm (and also in English-speaking countries) when the word was at times listed as the most popular search term on Technorati, even eclipsing former defense secretary US Donald Rumsfeld who had just resigned from office. This followed discussions and speculations which the company had to face in the German blogosphere, mainly about issues, such as server performance, questions of privacy, internationalization and publicity gaffes by the inexperienced team of founders.[citation needed]

Some bloggers also published critical accounts and speculations about the company's business practices, claiming they included spamming, cybersquatting and over-reliance on the enthusiasm of volunteers. In the meantime, the company has tried to answer some of the criticism, which nevertheless continues unabated. In March 2007 Dariani withdrew from management, but entered the directorate.[4]

In February 2007, hackers broke into StudiVZ and stole numerous profiles including passwords and email addresses. As a result, the passwords of every member were reset.[5]

Recently, studiVZ was criticized for the provocative contents of a campaign of viral videos. Reportedly, one of three particular videos, for example, shows a gang that murders a vegetarian and feeds him to pigs.[6]

Facebook sued StudiVZ in a California federal court on July 18, 2008, for copying its look, feel, features and services. It denied the intellectual property lawsuit accusations, and asked for declaratory judgment at the District Court in Stuttgart.[7] Facebook stated: "As with any counterfeit product, StudiVZ's uncontrolled quality standards for service, features and privacy negatively impact the genuine article."[8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d studiVZ | Über uns
  2. ^ Alex Bakst, StudiVZ Takes on Facebook, 2006. http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,446353,00.html
  3. ^ (German) Richard Meusers, Peinliche Pannen bringen StudiVZ in Verruf, 2006. http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/0,1518,448340,00.html
  4. ^ (German) Torsten Kleinz, StudiVZ: Umstrittener Gründer scheidet aus Geschäftsführung aus, 2007. http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/86598
  5. ^ (German) Torsten Kleinz, Daten-Gau bei StudiVZ, 2007. http://www.focus.de/digital/internet/online-community_nid_45470.html
  6. ^ (German) Claudia Frickel, StudiVZ provoziert mit Ekelvideos, 2007. http://www.focus.de/digital/internet/internet_aid_68779.html#
  7. ^ .reuters.com, German site sued by Facebook says claims without merit
  8. ^ news.bbc.co.uk/, Facebook challenges German rival

[edit] External links