Tumblr
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Tumblr
Summary
Tumblr is a blog software[1]. Tumblr has Wikipedia articles in 68 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Tumblr authored David Karp[3].
- Tumblr is in the country of United States[4].
- Tumblr's instance of is recorded as blog software[5].
- Tumblr's instance of is recorded as website[6].
- Tumblr's instance of is recorded as social networking service[7].
- Tumblr's instance of is recorded as company[8].
- Tumblr's instance of is recorded as online community[9].
- Tumblr's founder is recorded as David Karp[10].
- Tumblr's founder is recorded as Marco Arment[11].
- Tumblr is owned by Automattic[12].
- Tumblr's headquarters location is recorded as New York City[13].
- Tumblr's chief executive officer is recorded as David Karp[14].
- Tumblr's collection is recorded as Social Sciences and Humanities Open Marketplace[15].
- Tumblr's collection is recorded as Text Analysis Portal for Research[16].
- Tumblr is used for creating[17].
- Tumblr is used for disseminating[18].
- Tumblr is used for sharing[19].
- Tumblr is used for blogging[20].
- Tumblr is used for writing[21].
- Tumblr is used for microblogging[22].
- Tumblr's Commons category is recorded as Tumblr[23].
- Tumblr's language of work or name is recorded as English[24].
- Tumblr's industry is recorded as social media[25].
- February 1, 2007 marks the founding of Tumblr[26].
- Tumblr's parent organization or unit is recorded as Automattic[27].
Body
Founding
Founders include David Karp[10] and Marco Arment[11]. February 1, 2007 marks the founding of Tumblr[26].
Leadership
Tumblr's chief executive officer is recorded as David Karp[14].
Operations
Tumblr's headquarters location is recorded as New York City[13]. Tumblr's parent organization or unit is recorded as Automattic[27].
Industry
Tumblr's industry is recorded as social media[25].
Ownership
Tumblr is owned by Automattic[12]. Tumblr's product or material produced is recorded as microblogging[28].
Why It Matters
Tumblr has Wikipedia articles in 68 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]