Spot.IM is Now OpenWeb

Spot.IM is Now OpenWeb

Spot.IM, a leading audience engagement and commenting platform for 700+ publishers including Huffington Post, TechCrunch, Salon, Rolling Stone, and Fox News announced it has changed its name to OpenWeb. The new name represents the company’s evolution from a location-based messaging service to an end-to-end solution for hosting quality conversations on the open web.

Read More: Aegis Software Announces Latest FactoryLogix Release, Providing Game-Changing Automate-To-Order Out-Of-The-Box

“Spot.IM has evolved over the years, building vibrant, distributed communities outside of traditional walled gardens, and inspiring quality conversations on the largest publisher sites in the world,” said OpenWeb’s CEO and Co-Founder, Nadav Shoval. OpenWeb engages more than 100 million monthly active users, and continues to grow as more people engage with content online. “Our new name is a reflection of our evolution, of our commitment to democracy, to the diversity of conversations on the web, to quality over noise, and to supporting the media industry at large,” said Shoval.

Read More: Monetate Releases React Mobile SDK For Faster, Easier Personalization

Coinciding with its name change, OpenWeb has launched the next generation of its platform, focused on increasing the quality of conversations. “OpenWeb incentivizes quality by rewarding thoughtful interactions, providing real-time feedback, and enabling publishers to set their own community guidelines,” the company’s SVP of Product, Ido Goldberg said. The new features include:

  • Quality scoring – Publishers can monitor and measure the health of their communities, and adjust moderation parameters to optimize quality engagement.
  • Gamifying and incentivizing quality – Commenters earn reputation points based on how the community values their contributions. Points give users influence, exposure, and access to different features – including the ability to post instantly and create their own threads.
  • Real-time feedback – In addition to its just-launched “Clarity” features, OpenWeb partnered with Google to deploy nudges that encourage users to take another look at posts that may be considered toxic or in violation of the specific publisher’s guidelines.

Read More: SalesTechStar Interview With David Leichner, Chief Marketing Officer At SQream

Write in to psen@itechseries.com to learn more about our exclusive editorial packages and programs.