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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MozillaZine is a discontinued unofficial Mozilla website that provided information about Mozilla products including Firefox browser, Thunderbird email client, and related software (SeaMonkey, Camino, Calendar and Mobile). The site used to host an active community support internet forum, and a community-driven knowledge base of information about Mozilla products, but as of 2019 the site was not being maintained anymore. The site is still online in read-only mode.
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Type of site | Web forum |
---|---|
Available in | English, French, Japanese, Spanish |
Created by | Chris Nelson |
URL | mozillazine |
Commercial | No |
Registration | Optional, for posting messages |
Launched | 1 September 1998 |
Current status | read-only |
The site was founded by Chris Nelson on September 1, 1998, just a few months after mozilla.org, which was created on February 23, 1998, and quickly grew in popularity. Improvements were added to the site and it soon moved to the mozillazine.org
domain. Originally, the site's main audience was Mozilla developers, both Netscape employees and outsiders, but it soon attracted interested observers and end users.
On November 14, 1998, MozillaZine merged with MozBin, which brought its webmaster, Jason Kersey, on board.
In the beginning of 2001, Chris Nelson phased out his involvement with the site.
In May 2002, Alex Bishop became the site's third member of staff. Alex Bishop became less involved with the site in 2007.
After 2007, MozillaZine was primarily administrated by Jason Kersey.
In 2009, MozillaZine removed news section of the site due to lack of interest and since the open source project was well covered by other sources, including general and computer press. The home page was updated to remove the News and Blogs links. MozillaZine refocused on community software support and advocacy.
On September 20, 2019, site admin Jason Kersey announced his departure from the project and that MozillaZine would go into read-only mode.[1] The site continued to operate, but without any administrator with root permissions on the server that hosts the forum.[2]
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