Virgilio.it

Virgilio
Type of site
Web portal
Available in1 languages
List of languages
it-IT
Founded27 November 1996
Country of originItaly
Area servedItaly
OwnerItaliaonline S.r.l.
Founder(s)Matrix S.p.A.
EditorItaliaonline S.r.l.
URLvirgilio.it
RegistrationOptional
Launched1996
Current statusActive

Virgilio was the first web portal in Italy. Started in 1996 as a web search engine and web directory manually edited by its own editors, based on the Yahoo! model, it has gradually evolved as a general portal with different content, webmail services, search engine, chat, and a web community.

According to Alexa, it ranked among the top 100 most visited domains in Italy.[1] Before 2013, it was among the top 15.[2]

Local content is presented in over 8,100 portals, one for each Italian town. According to Audiweb in November 2015, half of all Italian web surfers visit the portal each month — over 13 million users.

History[edit]

The portal's name is based on Virgil, Dante's guide in the Divine Comedy. Advertising itself as, "the Italian guide to the Internet," Virgil had the mission to complement the search made by a computer by categorizing sites in meaningful ways for Italian Internet users.

In the years of the Dot-com bubble (1999-2001), Virgilio remained in the collective imagination thanks to a successful advertising campaign: an old man wearing a coppola cap with a cigarette in his mouth, accompanied by the advertising slogan "Virgilio, the beauty of the Internet."

Today, Virgilio still provides information content organized into vertical thematic channels; with Webmail, search, chat, and community products.

In 2016, the portal adopted the Microsoft Bing search engine for its search services.[3]

Corporate affairs[edit]

The portal was owned by Matrix S.p.A., founded in 1995 by Paolo Ainio, Carlo Gualandri and Marco Benatti, which since 1999 was controlled 66% by the SEAT Pagine Gialle group along with De Agostini, and then in 2001 came under the control of TI Media and finally in August 2004 by Telecom Italia.

For about two years, from late 2005 to late 2007, the Virgilio portal was blocked by Telecom Italia, preferring its Alice ADSL brand (designed to market its ADSL offering).

On August 9, 2012, Telecom Italia announced the sale of 100 percent of its subsidiary, Matrix, (and thus the sale of the portal) to Libero S.r.l., a subsidiary of Weather Investment II S.à.r.l., based on an enterprise value of 88 million euros. The merger of the two companies gave birth to Italy's leading Web portal[4], which in early 2013, will take the name of Italiaonline S.p.a.,[5], becoming a Società per azioni.[6]

Disruptions[edit]

From January 22 to 28, 2023, the Virgilio Mail service, in conjunction with the Libero Mail portal, also owned by Italiaonline S.p.A., was not accessible.[7] [8] In the history of Virgilio and Libero, it was the longest disruption ever. The company had ruled out, via a statement on their portal, that the disruption was caused by a cyber attack on their systems.[9]

Logos[edit]

See also[edit]

  • Libero (web portal)
  • TIM Group
  • Bruno, Nicola; Nielsen, Rasmus Kleis (April 2012). "Italy: Start-Ups as a Break with the Past?". Survival is Success: Journalistic Online Start-Ups in Western Europe (PDF). Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. pp. 69–73. ISBN 978-1-907384-08-0. Retrieved 29 June 2023 – via Repubblica.it.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Alexa siteinfo". Archived from the original on 18 September 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Alexa siteinfo". 18 September 2013. Archived from the original on 18 September 2013.
  3. ^ "Italiaonline sceglie Bing per i servizi di ricerca di Libero e Virgilio" [Italiaonline chooses Bing for Libero and Virgilio's search services] (in Italian). Archived from the original on 1 October 2016. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  4. ^ Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso, ed. (9 August 2012). "Telecom ha venduto Virgilio a Libero.it Nasce il più grande player italiano del web" [Telecom sold Virgilio to Libero.it, Birth of Italy's largest web player] (in Italian). la Repubblica.
  5. ^ Gruppo 24 ORE, ed. (7 February 2013). "Da Libero e Virgilio (ri)nasce ItaliaOnline" [From Libero and Virgil is (re)born ItaliaOnline] (in Italian). Il Sole 24 Ore.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link)
  6. ^ Ufficio Stampa Italiaonline, ed. (16 April 2014). "Comunicazione di avvenuta esecuzione della trasformazione della forma giuridica di Italiaonline da S.r.l. a S.p.A." [Notice of execution of the legal transformation of Italiaonline from S.r.l. to S.p.A.] (in Italian). www.italiaonline.it. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  7. ^ "Libero e Virgilio down, anche oggi continuano i disservizi" [Libero and Virgil down, disruptions continue today] (in Italian).
  8. ^ "Libero e Virgilio Mail down: caselle accessibili. Nuovo comunicato ufficiale" [Libero and Virgilio Mail down: boxes accessible. New official statement] (in Italian).
  9. ^ "Comunicato di Italiaonline S.p.A. sul disservizio" [Italiaonline S.p.A. release on the disruption] (in Italian).

External links[edit]