ProBoards

ProBoards is a free, remotely hosted message board service that facilitates online discussions by allowing people to create their own online communities.

ProBoards.com
The main page of ProBoards Support, the official support forum.
Type of site
Remotely hosted forum
OwnerPatrick Clinger
Created byPatrick Clinger
URLProBoards.com
Alexa rank 3,438 (October 2017)[1]
CommercialYes
RegistrationRequired for creating forums; admin optional on individual forums.
Current statusv.5

Ownership and service statistics

ProBoards was founded and is owned by Patrick Clinger, who wrote the ProBoards software.

The service hosts over 3,000,000 internet forums, which in turn have approximately 22,800,000 users worldwide.[2] Currently, all ProBoards forums combined receive a total of over 600 million pageviews per month,[3] making ProBoards one of the largest websites on the Internet.

However, according to Techcrunch.com writer Anthony Ha, those numbers have seemingly dropped. In an interview, founder/owner Patrick Clinger stated "ProBoards has been used to create 3.5 million forums", but about 1.2 million of them are still active (i.e. resulting in the occasional page view).[4]

Software history

Proboards is coded in Perl, a popular programming language with web developers. Previously, due to the remotely hosted nature of the service, users cannot modify the software directly as with some forum systems, but some customisation is possible through the use of CSS or JavaScript codes. With the release of v.5, however, ProBoards gives Administrators and certain other members access to the HTML and CSS of the webpage, for easier coding purposes.

The first day of business for ProBoards was January 1, 2000. At first, ProBoards originally used software created by the owner, Patrick Clinger. In late 2001, though, ProBoards switched to the YaBB system. At the same time, other changes to the service made it the first remotely hosted service to offer a subdomain with each forum (e.g. username.proboards[servernumber].com)

On June 11, 2002, ProBoards Version 2 was launched. This was coded by Clinger and was a rewrite of the entire software rather than improvements to the existing YaBB based setup. The main goals of this rewrite were to improve the overall speed of the software and add new features to keep the product competitive.

In February 2003, version 3 of the ProBoards software was released, again making improvements on the overall speed of the software and including over 30 new features.

ProBoards upgraded to version 4 of its software on April 30, 2005. This time, the upgrade added over 100 new features and enhancements to the service. Despite this, bugs of varying levels of severity still existed.

The current version of the software is v5.

ProBoards Server 48 hosted at The Planet

ProBoards' servers - physical machines running the ProBoards software - are hosted by SoftLayer. Previous to November 2010, ProBoards was hosted by ThePlanet.com, and previous to 2006, EV1 Servers. The servers are hosted in multiple SoftLayer datacenters in Texas.

In 2005, Patrick Clinger was invited by EV1 Servers to take part in a commercial for their business. The commercial opened with a voiceover introducing Clinger as the owner of ProBoards.com, and he then gave a testimonial about how EV1's hosting benefited ProBoards. The commercial was shown at the 2005 Houston Bowl. Since 2007, EV1 no longer exists as a webhost, having merged with The Planet.

As of March 2009, the server numbers (boardname.proboards##.com) no longer need to be used due to a recent change that allows every ProBoards forum to be accessed without a server number in the URL. (For example, boardname.proboards.com)

Due to the advent of Facebook, ProBoards transitioned into a social network and forum service hybrid with the introduction of version 5.

Hosting

Although a number of subscription style features are optionally available, there is no obligation for any user to purchase anything from ProBoards. Forums are hosted for free, with no bandwidth or webspace cap,[5] provided users allow advertisements to be displayed on their forum.

Until September 2003, ProBoards was supported by popunders, but these were discontinued in favor of less intrusive methods of advertising. Currently a typical forum will contain a Google AdSense banner ad and some small text links on every page. ProBoards also sells advertising directly to users through a selfserve system.[6]

ProBoards also has an agreement with a third party chatroom provider, addonInteractive, to provide Java-based chatrooms to users. Each forum admin can activate a free version of the chat on their forum, with paid upgrades available for busy forums. The chats integrate fully with forum accounts.

Policies

ProBoards users are bound by a number of Terms of Service, restricting the type of content which may appear on a ProBoards forum. ProBoards prohibits illegal or adult content. Formerly, only English forums were allowed, but in May 2010 this policy was changed, allowing boards to be created in any language.[7] In addition to content policies, Proboards terms also seemingly prohibit the use of "ad-blocking" technology when accessing its services.[8]

User privacy is protected by a Privacy Policy outlining the use of logged information, as well as cookie policy, forum monitoring, and publicly available information.

The US COPPA law is enforced by requiring all users to enter their date of birth on registration. Users aged under 13 are not permitted to register at any ProBoards forum. According to the Terms of Service, any user under the age of 18 also requires parental permission to register, but this is taken as implied when they accept the registration agreement and not verified.

ProBoards allows users to apply affiliate marketing practices to monetize their communities via a partnership with VigLink announced January 2014. This partnership allows any ProBoards forum managers or creators to generate revenue from traffic with VigLink Insert.[9]

gollark: There's one bad Rust implementation, one working but VERY limited JS implementation, several experimental bad JS implementations, one decent Nim implementation and actually that's it.
gollark: Even if I constantly dewrote and rewrote it.
gollark: Minoteaur at least HAS RECEIVED CHANGES.
gollark: Macron is unspecified thus no.
gollark: This is due to expression > statement.

References

  1. "Proboards.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2017-08-10.
  2. "Quick Stats." ProBoards.com. 05-21-2009. 15 October 2008
  3. PatrickClinger.com. "About Me." 26 May 2008
  4. Ha, Anthony. "ProBoards Upgrades its Forum-Building Tools with a New Dashboard and Live Search". techcrunch.com. Retrieved 2014-10-22.
  5. "Terms of Service, Section 2. Archived 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine" ProBoards.com. 01-02-2002. 16 May 2007
  6. "Advertise. Archived 2012-02-06 at the Wayback Machine" ProBoards.com. 26 June 2008
  7. "Terms of Service, Section 3. Archived 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine" ProBoards.com. 01-02-2002. 28 July 2007
  8. "Terms of Service- 19 (d)(e) Archived 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine" Effective 01-05-2010. ProBoards.com. July 2007
  9. "ProBoards Partners with VigLink to Create Monetization Opportunities for Internet Forum Administrators". Yahoo Finance. Retrieved 2015-12-30.
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