Accoona was an internet company with offices in Jersey City, New Jersey, and Shanghai, China. Their main product was a search engine that claimed to use artificial intelligence to better understand searches. On June 23, 2005, in the ABC Times Square Studios, the AI Accoona Toolbar, driven by a Fritz 9 prototype, played against the chess grandmaster Rustam Kasimdzhanov. In addition to traditional searches, it allows business profile searches, and its signature "SuperTarget" feature. Their exclusive partnership with China Daily, a large Chinese internet portal, was seen as a highly strategic move.[citation needed]

Accoona
Type of site
B2B search engine

The CEO of Accoona was Valentine J. Zammit, formerly of 24/7 Real Media and DoubleClick.[citation needed]

After IPO problems, Accoona shut down on October 5, 2008.[1]

In October 2008 the web page said: "Dear Accoona search users, Due to an overwhelmingly competitive search market, Accoona.com and Accoona.cn will no longer be active. We thank you for your previous support. Sincerely, Accoona Management."[citation needed]

Accoona's domains and search facilities were acquired by Masterseek B2B (business-to-business) search engine on October 30, 2008.[citation needed]

Partnerships edit

Accoona provided the search technology to the Chinese portals Sina.com and Sohu. They also formed a 20-year exclusive partnership with China Daily. Through this partnership and its widespread Chinese affiliates, Accoona expected 10 million hits daily from the otherwise isolated Chinese user base.[citation needed]

Accoona signed a million dollar deal with FAST Search from Norway to help enhance their rankings.[citation needed]

Press edit

  • Accoona received attention after selecting former President Bill Clinton as a spokesperson on December 8, 2004.
  • Accoona also received significant coverage from the webmaster community after many forum sites were spammed with promotional Accoona entries.[citation needed]
  • Accoona was selected among the "50 Coolest Websites" of 2006 by Time magazine.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Dead Search Engine Accoona Officially Dead". Archived from the original on 2008-10-26. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  2. ^ Buechner, Maryanne Murray (August 3, 2006). "50 Coolest Websites 2006". Time. Archived from the original on August 19, 2006.

External links edit