Just wondering considering that image hosting and server costs aren't free.
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RĂ©ponse de ZĂĽrich Gnome
le 1 février 2019 à 23h29
As I recall, TMDb is a subsidiary of a larger, for-profit media company, but I don't recall the company's name. I think that company pays for the maintenance of the site, but I don't know the exact legal connection between the two.
RĂ©ponse de Travis Bell
le 8 février 2019 à 17h33
Hi @TKB21, TMDb is owned by TiVo. I've been fortunate enough to have them believe in my vision for TMDb. Without their support, there's no way TMDb would be online today. Ads wouldn't even come close to cover our expenses, so everyone should be very thankful of this arrangement.
RĂ©ponse de TKB21
le 8 février 2019 à 17h36
Thanks Travis. Hats off to you for bringing the site where it is today. As a sole dev myself I have nothin but respect for your hustle.
RĂ©ponse de Travis Bell
le 8 février 2019 à 17h40
Thanks @TKB21. While I have full operations financial support from them, it can be hard for me at times doing this on my own (I'm still the only dev). But hopefully I can change that this year and get some help. There's still so much to build!
RĂ©ponse de TKB21
le 8 février 2019 à 17h41
I hear that. Were you acquired? Like did they eventually just...reach out to you and offer to be a silent backer?
RĂ©ponse de Travis Bell
le 8 février 2019 à 17h49
Sort of a long story but short version: I actually sold TMDb in 2010 and since then have been acquired by larger companies 2 more times. Every step of the way someone bigger has believed in me and the work I do so I guess I've been doing something right.
RĂ©ponse de TKB21
le 8 février 2019 à 17h53
Well deserved and thank you for taking the time out to explain. I've always been fascinated with web companies so I just wanted to ask, do you shop yourself around or do they contact you out of the blue? Sorry for the barrage of questions. Not every day (or at all) you run into webmasters of successful websites that are not only transparent but friendly 🙂.
RĂ©ponse de Travis Bell
le 8 février 2019 à 17h59
I did a combination of both. I was working a full time job and trying to work on TMDb in my off hours but things kind of came to a head in late 2009/early 2010. I was making peanuts in donations and was having to pay a lot money out of my own pocket to run TMDb. It came down to either sell it, take investment money or just walk away. I was lucky and found some guys who loved TMDb and wanted to see it grow. So we came to an agreement and I got to start working on TMDb full time.
RĂ©ponse de TKB21
le 8 février 2019 à 18h00
Cool! Thanks for the explanation. Hoping one day I can reach that level myself.
RĂ©ponse de Travis Bell
le 8 février 2019 à 18h01
No problem, and good luck.
RĂ©ponse de PT 100
le 8 février 2019 à 19h04
Yes, thanks, Travis, for the detailed explanation and for all your tireless work. I hope you had a really restful vacation!
For anyone who wants to know more, here's a blurb about TiVo, the company that makes DVRs and that gobbled up several other companies before being acquired by Rovi.
Here's a NY Times article on the purchase of TiVo by Rovi.
And here's a blurb on Rovi and its history. After all the acquisitions, they are a big player in their space, holding over 6,000 patents. I believe that TiVo's architecture is now licensed by many major cable companies for their own DVR boxes.
I have owned about a dozen TiVo DVRs over the years, and their menu navigation system and other features are simply unbeatable. That's why so many others quit trying to compete with TiVo's excellent architecture and instead decided to license it from TiVo.
I currently have a TiVo Bolt and a TiVo Premiere DVR; and although I have cut the Comcast cable and now stream almost everything, I still use the TiVos hooked up to digital HD over-the-air antennas to get local TV stations for free.
Bottom line: Travis has a smart benefactor with really deep pockets. That's reassuring.
RĂ©ponse de Moondoggie
le 8 février 2019 à 19h19
Hey, @pt100, thanks for the history lesson. It does sound like this site has solid financial backing. I, too, have owned several TiVo DVRs along the way, and they are for the most part a superior design. (My only nit pick is that there occasionally are bugs that sometimes take a while for TiVo to fix. But their 6,000+ patents imply a rather complicated architecture, so I guess we can forgive them for that.) You're right, that's why so many others have licensed their architecture.
RĂ©ponse de jointdogg
le 17 novembre 2020 Ă 01h45
so the TVDB just announced they are changing their free api to be subscription based. I wonder, since TMDB is owned by a for-profit company, could the future be the same? especially since the "About Us" page celebrates its community: "The Movie Database (TMDb) is a community built movie and TV database. Every piece of data has been added by our amazing community dating back to 2008."
@travisbell is there a way you could commit for this project to be forever free? or is it already out of your hands as part of the acquisition agreement? I'd really hate contributing again and having my free contributions become for sale by the web admins.
RĂ©ponse de Sixties Holdout
le 17 novembre 2020 Ă 03h05
I seem to recall a discussion/explanation of the monetization scheme for this website in a different thread a while ago. I believe that Travis explained that the database content contributed for free by users is being licensed to various media companies in order to make money, so that the site wouldn't have to be plastered w/all sorts of advertising the way IMDb is. But I'm not sure what that means, if anything, for the API.
RĂ©ponse de PT 100
le 18 novembre 2020 Ă 15h46
I wasn't aware of that change. What does that mean for users? Can someone please explain this? Thanks.