Curlie
Curlie is a multilingual open-content directory of World Wide Web links. It is constructed and maintained by a community of volunteer editors.
Curlie is organized under the non-profit organization "Curlie Project, Inc.", a successor of DMOZ.[1] It started with most of the content of the DMOZ project, which had shut down on March 17, 2017. Jasmine Directory, a human-edited web directory, describes Curlie as the "official successor" to DMOZ.[2] As of 2018, aspiring editors need to fill out an application to join the Curlie editing community.[3]
Notes[edit]
- ↑ "Search Engines and Directory Snapshots". research.library.gsu.edu. Georgia State University. April 12, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
- ↑ "Curlie". jasminedirectory.com. May 31, 2018. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
- ↑ "Become an Editor". curlie.org. Curlie Project, Inc. December 22, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
External links[edit]
- Lua error in Module:Official_website at line 90: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Resource Zone public forum
![]() | This World Wide Web–related article is a stub. You can help EverybodyWiki by expanding it. |
This article "Curlie" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Curlie. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.
- Internet properties established in 2017
- Collaboration
- Open content projects
- Web directories
- English-language websites
- Spanish-language websites
- Danish-language websites
- German-language websites
- Czech-language websites
- Arabic-language websites
- Catalan-language websites
- Afrikaans-language websites
- Esperanto-language websites
- Aragonese-language websites
- Armenian-language websites
- Asturian-language websites
- Korean-language websites
- Kurdish-language websites
- Latvian-language websites
- Multilingual websites
- Azerbaijani-language websites
- Luxembourgish-language websites
- Lithuanian-language websites
- Indonesian-language websites
- Latin-language websites
- Hungarian-language websites
- Macedonian-language websites
- Malay-language websites
- Bangala-language websites
- Marathi-language websites
- Albanian-language websites
- Belarusian-language websites
- Bashkir-language websites
- Norwegian-language websites
- North Frisian-language websites
- Uzbek-language websites
- Breton-language websites
- Bosnian-language websites
- Bulgarian-language websites
- Occitan-language websites
- Ossetian-language websites
- Persian-language websites
- Chinese-language websites
- Polish-language websites
- Punjabi-language websites
- Portuguese-language websites
- Welsh-language websites
- Dutch-language websites
- Estonian-language websites
- Romanian-language websites
- Basque-language websites
- Russian-language websites
- Sardinian-language websites
- Romansh-language websites
- Saterland Frisian-language websites
- French-language websites
- Sicilian-language websites
- Turkish-language websites
- Sinhala-language websites
- Slovene-language websites
- Slovak-language websites
- West Frisian-language websites
- Friulian-language websites
- Faroese-language websites
- Serbian-language websites
- Finnish-language websites
- Irish-language websites
- Galician-language websites
- Scottish Gaelic websites
- Swedish-language websites
- Tagalog-language websites
- Greek-language websites
- Gujarati-language websites
- Croatian-language websites
- Hindi-language websites
- Tatar-language websites
- Hebrew-language websites
- Telugu-language websites
- Thai-language websites
- Vietnamese-language websites
- Turkmen-language websites
- Ukrainian-language websites
- Kyrgyz-language websites
- Icelandic-language websites
- Uyghur-language websites
- Italian-language websites
- Japanese-language websites
- Kannada-language websites
- Kazakh-language websites
- Swahili-language websites
- Kashubian-language websites
- Interlingua-language websites
- Tamil-language websites