Blackvoices.com

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Blackvoices.com was an American website with content targeted towards

African-American culture. Founded in 1995, by Barry Cooper, it first appeared as a link on the Orlando Sentinel website.[1] After being sold twice, it has become a subsection named Black Voices on the HuffPost
website.

History

Early on, website received a five million-dollar investment from

African-American
culture, the site was no longer black-owned.

At its peak, Blackvoices.com was structured with news articles, a

messageboard, and blogs. Users had to be a member of AOL
to join the site.

In October 2000, General Motors announced a multimillion-dollar three-year deal to advertise on the site.[2][3]

Some members were upset with the sale of Blackvoices.com from Tribune to AOL and then from AOL to

The Huffington Post
. Although under AOL the messageboard stayed intact with some changes, The Huffington Post has removed the messageboard.

References

  1. ^ Ebony. Johnson Publishing Company. June 2000. p. 46. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  2. ^ "GM Inks Deal with BlackVoices.com". Computerworld. 2000-10-06. Retrieved 2012-11-03.
  3. ^ "General Motors Corp. and BlackVoices.com form 3-year strategic marketing alliance." Indianapolis Recorder. October 13, 2000. (subscription required)

Additional sources

External links