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SAY Media
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Say Media (formerly VideoEgg) is a technology and advertising firm. The company provides a publishing platform (Tempest) to professional publishers and sells advertising across that platform and extended network of sites. Say Media has offices in San Francisco, Portland, NY, London, Montreal, Toronto, Chicago, and Detroit and is .


History
Say Media was formed when VideoEgg (a video advertising company) bought Six Apart (a technology company that created Moveable Type and TypePad). VideoEgg was founded in early 2005 when graduates David Lerman, Matthew Sanchez and Kevin Sladek were making video software. At the time, the three were involved in a matching non-profit organizations that needed public service announcements with a nationwide network of digital filmmakers and editors. About.com , September 19, 2005. TechCrunch, September 21, 2005.

Lerman, Sanchez and Sladek created tools to manage web video made with the wide range of available devices, editors, encoders, and players.

As their business matured they began to focus on , they found an opportunity in video advertising in online video and online social networking services. In May, 2008 the company officially discontinued video hosting services to focus entirely on its online advertising network. VideoEgg Gets Rid of hosting, To Focus on Ad Network, March 3, 2008

In June 2008, VideoEgg and one of its partner websites, hi5, were sued in the United States by recording labels and music publishers. The plaintiffs alleged that the services were liable for copyright infringement due to videos uploaded by hi5 users through the VideoEgg application, and sought against the allegedly infringing activity. Complaint for Direct, Contributory, and Vicarious Copyright Infringement, Misappropriation, and Unfair Competition, Capitol Records, LLC v. VideoEgg, Inc., 611 F. Supp. 2d 349 (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York 2009) (No. 08 CV 5831).

VideoEgg acquired in 2010, and renamed itself Say Media. VideoEgg Will Acquire Six Apart And Rename Itself SAY Media It sold and the Six Apart name to Infocom, a Japanese information technology company; Say Media retained . As a result of this transaction, the headquarters of Six Apart is now Tokyo, Japan.

Say Media acquired the websites , , POPcast Communications, and over the past several years. Say Media Acquires Dogster (And Has More Acquisitions In The Works) SAY Media Continues Acquisition Spree, Buys Home Design Website Remodelista It also launched , with editor Jane Pratt, xoVain, its beauty-centric counterpart, and , a sister site of Remodelista. In 2013, the company divested these assets to focus on the Tempest platform and advertising operations. Say Media subsequently sold Dogster & Catster, ReadWriteWeb, Remodelista and Gardenista, which as of early 2015 all operate independently or under new ownership.


Funding
Say Media is a privately owned company. As of 2010, VideoEgg had conducted four , raising over $30 million. Investors include First Round Capital, , August Capital, Focus Ventures and . "VideoEgg Gets a Jolt of VC", Business Week, September 27, 2006. "WPP acquires stake in VideoEgg, US-based video advertising specialists", WPP press release, April 16, 2007.


Products and services
The company currently builds, maintains and provides Tempest, a publishing platform, to professional publishers in exchange for managing their unsold inventory. As of October 2016, 50 sites including Maxim, Rachael Ray, Climbing, Bio, and Fashionista were using the platform. Say's in-house design team (located in Portland, Oregon) creates display ad units and the custom using advertiser's creative assets. AdFrames.

In July 2008, VideoEgg announced several new capabilities to their ad network. These include offering advertisers increased ad features and functionalities, such as:

Publishers are able to integrate VideoEgg's AdPlatform. VideoEgg then serves the ads, which are designed to fit in any space and publishers receive payment every time a user engages with one of the VideoEgg ad units on the publisher's site.


Trademark
The company successfully filed a lawsuit for trademark infringement against an Israeli company (associated with the Komodia library) also calling itself Say Media. That company has since changed names.

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