Flooz.com
Corporation (closed) | |
Industry | Internet payments |
Founded | February 1999[1] in New York City |
Defunct | August 26, 2001 |
Headquarters | New York City |
Products | Flooz |
Flooz.com was a dot-com venture, now defunct, based in New York City that went online in February 1999, promoted by comic actress Whoopi Goldberg in a series of television advertisements.[1] Started by iVillage co-founder Robert Levitan, the company attempted to establish a currency unique to Internet merchants, somewhat similar in concept to airline frequent flier programs or grocery store stamp books. The name "flooz" was based upon the Arabic word for money, فلوس, fuloos. Users accumulated flooz credits either as a promotional bonus given away by some internet businesses or purchased directly from flooz.com which then could be redeemed for merchandise at a variety of participating online stores. Adoption of flooz by both merchants and customers proved limited, and it never established itself as a widely recognized medium of exchange, which hindered both its usefulness and appeal.
Use by crime syndicate
In 2001, Flooz.com was notified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation that a Russian organized crime syndicate was using Flooz and stolen credit card numbers as part of a money-laundering scheme, in which stolen credit cards were used to purchase currency and then redeemed.[2] Levitan has stated that fraudulent purchases accounted for 19% of consumer credit card transactions by mid-2001.[3]
Closure
The company announced its closure on August 26, 2001, perceived as an early indicator of the growing dot-com bubble bust.[3] Upon the company's closing, all unused flooz credits became worthless and nonrefundable. Over its short history, flooz.com reportedly exhausted from $35 to $50 million in venture capital.[4]
See also
References
- 1 2 Kosoff, Maya (October 16, 2015). "These dot-com startups look just like some of today's hottest tech companies — here's what happened to them". Business Insider. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
- ↑ Tedeschi, Bob (August 27, 2001). "E-Commerce Report; Seller of Online Currency May Have Been Victim of Fraud". The New York Times. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
- 1 2 Aune, Sean P. (January 25, 2010). "Five Dot-Coms That Didn't Survive The Bubble". TechnoBuffalo. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
- ↑ Top 10 dot-com flops CNET.com