Cohost
Cohost was a social media website publicly launched in. It was owned by a not-for-profit software company named Anti Software Software Club.
On, it was announced that it would enter a read-only state on, and be discontinued at the end of. Registration was closed on the day of the announcement. The shutdown was later postponed to accommodate an archiving effort by the Archive Team. The website was shut down on.History
The idea for Cohost was conceptualized in, and the mascot for the website was created in. It was launched in a closed beta in. Early access registration via invite code was allowed in June of that year. Starting around November, anyone was allowed to register, but new users had to sit through a waiting period before their account was activated.
Cohost was reported as having financial issues in after temporarily losing contact with the person funding it, but the site was stated to have backup plans and they were able to reestablish contact with their funder.
In, it was announced that Cohost would be shutting down at the end of, with the site entering a read-only state on. The reason given was lack of funding and developer burnout.Features
Cohost featured posts similar in style to Twitter, but without a character limit. Users could like, comment, and repost, but some interactions were hidden, including like counts on posts, as well as the followers and follower counts of users. There was no trending timeline or algorithm-based timeline; the website instead featured a chronological timeline and a tagging system where searchable hashtags could be attached to posts. The website supported Markdown and editing of HTML and CSS within posts. There was also a monthly subscription service called Cohost Plus, which offered an increased file size limit and other features, but mainly served as a way to support the development of the website. There were plans to implement a tip jar feature and a subscription feature similar to Patreon, where users could subscribe to creators and other users on the site for access to exclusive posts, but the feature was canceled, as it was understood that their chosen payment processor Stripe disallowed such activity under their terms and conditions.Users
The active userbase was around in to around in. The report gave the number of registered users at around. A report by the staff in gave the number of registered users as and the number of monthly active users as. The report gave the total register user count as around with the monthly active user count as ; of those, were Cohost Plus subscribers.Reception
Cohost generally received positive reception. The site was praised for allowing users to edit HTML and CSS in posts, allowing users to make games and so-called "CSS crimes." It was also given praise for allowing users to edit posts after they are posted, a lack of ads, and navigable web design. Some reviewers noted the lack of a proper search feature and the lack of a dedicated mobile app.