About six years after Imgur CEO Alan Schaaf founded the image-sharing service, the site, which is especially popular among millennial males, has reached a whopping 150 million monthly active users -- ...
Imgur's humble bootstrapping days over. The scrappy image-sharing company that employs a dozen people announced Thursday it raised $40 million in a Series A round led by Andreessen Horowitz. Reddit, ...
Imgur, which began in 2009 as a university side project to create a simple way to share images, now claims to be the top online destination for millennial men in the US — over Facebook, Twitter, and ...
On the latest episode of Recode Decode, hosted by Kara Swisher, Imgur CEO Alan Schaaf explained how the image-sharing site is trying to be a “beacon of hope to attract the people that are sick of ...
Imgur is Internet dude paradise. The underhyped image sharing and commenting community has 150 million active users and saw 900 billion page views in 2015. Thanks to silly GIFs, science experiments, ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Imgur is ...
Imgur’s come a long way from being the pet project of a redditor to being a massively lucrative company of over a dozen employees. But now that they’ve got a titanic VC from Andreessen Horowitz, those ...
This fall, Yahoo began serious talks to buy photo-sharing site Imgur, a source with first-hand knowledge of those discussions tells us. Since she joined Yahoo in July 2012, CEO Marissa Mayer has ...
Here’s an embarrassing secret: Before today, I’d never made a GIF. I mean, obviously I’ve seen them, laughed when they’ve been passed along, and made a note so that I could share them myself later.
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Imgur has ...
Imgur, which began in 2009 as a university side project to create a simple way to share images, now claims to be the top online destination for millennial men in the US — over Facebook, Twitter, and ...