Advertisement
Internet Culture

Imgur, the Internet’s favorite photo-hosting site, gets $40 million investment

The investment includes a small sum from Reddit, the site that fueled Imgur’s growth.

Photo of Chase Hoffberger

Chase Hoffberger

Article Lead Image

Imgur, the bootstrapped public photo sharing website that in five years just turned its 5 billion monthly page views into a $40 million investment. This morning, Betabeat reported that CEO and founder Alan Schaaf has signed on with venture capitalist Andreessen Horowitz (“A16Z”) and firm partner Lars Dalgaard.

Featured Video

The deal comes after a solid year of acquisition rumors for the website, which started as a gift from Schaaf to Reddit and has now sprung into some wild viral beast of its own, with upvotes, down votes, and a legible community of commenters. 

“We’re definitely more than just an image host,” Schaaf told Betabeat. “We have a passionate, dedicated community, but that change has happened very gradually and organically.”

That’ll change on the site’s backend and show up shortly on the front. Schaaf said Imgur’s first priority right now is to hire new engineers and salespeople, and to flesh out the site’s mobile experience, which should further enhance its convenience and flexibility. 

Advertisement

Betabeat also reports that Reddit, Imgur’s spiritual father even if it’s now less sizable, has invested an undisclosed amount Schaaf calls “very small in comparison.”

One would imagine, however, that the move is more symbolic than anything. The two sites have been intertwined since Imgur’s beginning, and Schaaf’s been bold in his support for Reddit. In 2013, at a South by Southwest panel about Reddit and the problems the site faces with regards to anonymity, Schaaf stood up and rattled off a laundry list of good Reddit deeds so long the moderators of the panel had to tell him he was being rude. 

Imgur’s community has also grown much in the way of the elder social news network. Much in the same way that the two have been accused of facilitating the distribution of corrupt stuff like child porn, its users have shown a real loyalty to each other. Just last fall, the community adopted an official dad.

Looks like daddy’s about to get a brand new pair of shoes.

Advertisement

Illustration by Jason Reed

 
The Daily Dot