Jun 5th 2008 12:25PM
DMOZ Turns 10

For the last several months, I've been reflecting on what the 10th anniversary of DMOZ actually means. DMOZ is fundamentally the same site it was in 1998. In the social media landscape we're the old timer's with wisdom and tons of life lessons learned. But is that to say its day has come and gone?
Absolutely not, and I don't just say that because I've spent the last nine of the past ten years keeping house. In part, I came to this conclusion because DMOZ growth has been unabated. The directory still gets an insane amount of submissions, editor applications and data usage. Its overall reach is unparalleled.
The relevancy of DMOZ 10 years later can be traced to its fiercely loyal and dedicated community of editors that has stayed true to the directory's roots and esprit de corps. This loosely organized global community of unpaid enthusiasts managed to collectively take DMOZ from a scrappy startup to a search industry institution. They have almost independently kept it relevant while its commercial counterparts drifted into obscurity or closed up altogether.
It is nothing short of historic that a collective group of volunteers could do this for 10 minutes much less 10 whole years. While the editors routinely get beat up by some industry illuminati for not being market focused, I hope that those folks can take a minute to collectively reflect on the tremendous amount of goodwill this group has shown to simply improve access to information over the web.
Over the years, DMOZ has been often duplicated but never replicated. Many initiatives have co-opted its model, while others have learned the lessons of DMOZ and built community based projects that ushered in the much ballyhooed social media revolution. Projects such as Wikipedia have traced their origins and influence to DMOZ.
Ten years ago, many people were skeptical that a community managed project could survive and become relevant. Ten years later, the DMOZ editors have proved that community managed projects weren't just a pipe dream, but the future of the Web.
But DMOZ hasn't been just about editing. It's been about connecting people from all walks of life. There's a DMOZ editor on every continent. The community represents many ethnic groups, nationalities speaking over 80 languages. Gatherings worldwide of DMOZ editors have taken place, some resulting in marriages and life-long friendships.
The past of DMOZ is full of myths, legends, drama, trauma, successes and failures, all of which help shape its future as social media's Grand Dame.
The tenth anniversary of DMOZ ushers in a new era that will bring in new and exciting changes later this summer.
In keeping with the successes of the past 10 years, the future of DMOZ is as an information provider rather than a destination site. We will be enhancing to service to become more of a 21st century web service and simplify the integration of DMOZ data in other resources and applications, by creating "mashups". For example if you maintain an informational site about gardening, you can use DMOZ to get you a list of hand-picked gardening sites to point your readers too, or if you are a hockey fan you can make a little widget on your blog to show hockey clubs in your local region. Stay tuned and please share your feedback here on the blog. We'll be sharing more information here in the next month or so and appreciate your thoughts.
Thank you to all DMOZ editors past and present for making this project a success. You've touched and made a difference in countless lives, and I'm certain more to come in the future.
Bob Keating, Managing Editor ODP




41. From Romania :Hello DMOZ !! Congratulation and Happy Birthday !!Go ahead!
Din Romania :Felicitari si La Multi Ani DMOZ!!Mergi inainte!<
Posted at 1:46AM on Jul 6th 2008 by arizoanca
42. This comment relates to a problem I have with the dmoz.org website being broken and not allowing me to submit my site. Sorry to post this here, but the only contact details I found to which to report the problem is staff@dmoz.org, but when I try that address my email bounces with an error saying that the dmoz mailbox is full. I also tried using the 'register abuse' form, but that didn't work either.
I have been prevented from submitting my site to the open directory for several weeks now because the captcha code facility is broken. (No captcha image appears.) The page that I am trying to submit my site to is:
http://www.dmoz.org/cgi-bin/add.cgi?where=World/Japanese/%E5%9C%B0%E5%9F%9F/%E3%83%A8%E3%83%BC%E3%83%AD%E3%83%83%E3%83%91/%E3%82%A4%E3%82%AE%E3%83%AA%E3%82%B9/%E3%82%AC%E3%82%A4%E3%83%89%E3%81%A8%E3%83%87%E3%82%A3%E3%83%AC%E3%82%AF%E3%83%88%E3%83%AA
The captcha code image doesn't appear because the domain
https://captcha.aol.com/ where the captcha image is supposed to be hosted times out.
Please could someone here forward this message on to the appropriate person so that it can be fixed as soon as possible? If there is a way that I can manually submit my site in the meantime, I'd love to hear about it. Please post here to let me know when the problem has been fixed or contact me directly.
Thank you.
Posted at 6:38PM on Jul 6th 2008 by Paul
43. Well said. Happy Birthday!
I hope that I can also reach the 10 year old anniversary with ODP.
Posted at 6:53PM on Jul 6th 2008 by Rocwood
44. Fantastic blog and site. I use this site for all my resources. Great job everyone!
Student Education Information Site
Reliable Consolidation help
Posted at 6:14AM on Jul 7th 2008 by Education Financing
45. Happy Birthday. You are the best
Posted at 12:12PM on Jul 11th 2008 by Education Financing
46. I posted comment 42 last week, but the problem has not yet been fixed and no one has got back to me. Is there anyone here that can knows where I should go for help with this kind of a problem? It's surprising that no one has noticed that it hasn't been possible to submit a site for almost a month (if not longer) under World/Japanese.
Thank you. By the way, happy birthday dmoz!
Posted at 7:27PM on Jul 14th 2008 by Paul
47. @Paul regarding posts 42 and 47 - here is not the best place for posting about; but you may post here: http://www.resource-zone.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=18 - there are similar threads.
Regards
Posted at 9:20AM on Jul 15th 2008 by budalata
48. goooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooood
Posted at 8:08AM on Jul 18th 2008 by xs5
49. Happy birth day to you today is your day when have taken a birth in this world it was a very good day for you wish you a very happy birth day.
________________________
Jecika
Addiction Recovery New Mexico
Posted at 1:02AM on Jul 20th 2008 by jecika gonzalvis
50. Congratulations to DMOZ and its supporters.
Posted at 2:02AM on Jul 21st 2008 by raviverma
51. Cool~Congratulations£¡~
Posted at 2:51AM on Jul 21st 2008 by konandoar
52. Congratulation and Happy birthday.
____________________
Jack
Addiction Recovery Wyoming
Posted at 5:36AM on Jul 28th 2008 by jack.furnandess
53. A BELATED Happy Birthday to DMOZ.
Reg Crowder
Posted at 8:02AM on Aug 2nd 2008 by REG CROWDER
54. I love this directory dmoz.org and I want to know, how can I become the editor of dmoz.
Posted at 2:37AM on Aug 5th 2008 by Madhuri
55. thanks
Posted at 4:32PM on Aug 12th 2008 by sohbet
56. Los felicito.
Saludos.
Posted at 12:15AM on Aug 13th 2008 by NICOLAS
57. I like DMOZ!
It is so good!
Posted at 1:28AM on Aug 14th 2008 by 21art
58. Happy birthday, DM10Z from all at unitedllc.net hope to be bring more to the tabel..soon
Posted at 4:50PM on Aug 15th 2008 by jwilson
59. Congratulations Dmoz, and All Fellows there:
Happy Birthday Internet, Happy Birthday Dmoz!
Posted at 8:15PM on Aug 17th 2008 by papa
60. Its nice to see DMOZ keeping up with the times, I really like the new DMOZ blog looks really great ;)
p.s happy 10th DMOZ
Posted at 8:31AM on Aug 19th 2008 by Photoshop Makeovers