Type of business Private | Industry Social media Date founded February 2011 | |
Website |
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Everloop was an online social media site for youngsters under 13.
Contents
- Hilary decesare everloop
- Conference hound tv hilary decesare everloop at silicon valley venture summit
- History
- COPPA and Moderation
- Parents
- Digital Training Ground
- EverText
- Features
- AffiliationsPartners
- Funding
- References
The site used loops (like Facebook groups) to give youngsters a place to interact. They were small communities created around interests in categories such as hobbies, photo sharing and video sharing.
In June 2011 Everloop launched EverText, a moderated texting feature approved for kids.
In 2012, Everloop launched Goobit, a social mobile app for kids.
In 2014, Everloop shut down.
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History
Originally launched for girls under the name “Girl Ambition,” the site was revamped for both girls and boys and relaunched in February 2011 under the name Everloop.com.
COPPA and Moderation
Everloop was created adhering to the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) standards and uses privacy protection and monitoring technology to guard young users against bullying, bad language and inappropriate sharing of information. Everloop's safety features include parent authentication to join, word and phrase filters, live staff for moderation and customer support and community user reporting for suspicious or inappropriate behavior.
Parents
The site permitted parents to monitor all friend requests and communication, but did not allow any parental posts to children's profile pages.
Digital Training Ground
The moderated social network, meant for children under the age of 13, prevents kids from posting profanity, engaging in cyberbullying or conducting other inappropriate behavior. Rather than simply deleting such posts, Everloop stopped the child from posting and provides immediate feedback to correct inappropriate behavior.
EverText
EverText was a SMS integration that is compliant with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). The service utilized privacy protection technologies, and enables kids to securely use mobile devices to broadcast updates to friends’ profiles or directly to their cell phones.
EverText allowed parents to moderate the number of texts kids can send, ranging from unlimited to 250 texts per month. When a child hit the limit, parents received a note and could add text credit to the account or leave it until the next month.
Features
Affiliations/Partners
Funding
The company closed a seed round of $3.1 million in 2011 backed by vFormation, Silicon Valley based Band of Angels, Envoi Ventures, Richard Chino] formerly of Overture, Wayne Goodrich formerly of Apple, Deena Burnett-Bailey of Angels of Hope and additional investors.