Viacom, Inc., and Joost entered into a content provider agreement for the Joost platform on 20 February 2007. Under the agreement, divisions of Viacom (including
MTV Networks,
BET Networks and
Paramount Pictures) were to license their "television and theatrical programming" to Joost. This came shortly after Viacom requested 100,000 potentially infringing videos to be removed from YouTube.com, which showed a preference by Viacom for the Joost platform over YouTube. , Joost had licensing agreements in place with
Ministry of Sound TV,
Aardman Animation,
Warner Music, the production company
Endemol, Fremantle Media,
RDF Media, Diversion Media,
CBS and CenterStaging's rehearsals.com. On 1 May 2007, Joost signed a deal to distribute
NHL content, including full game replays of the
Stanley Cup Finals, and vintage games.
Bollywood distributor
Eros International also announced a deal with Joost in 2007. The majority of the content on Joost was restricted to users in the United States of America, due to lack of international licensing arrangements. The company's first CEO, Frederick de Wahl, was succeeded by
Mike Volpi in June 2007. Volpi stepped down in July 2009 amidst a round of job cuts, being succeeded by Matt Zelesko. Volpi blamed the content companies for sidelining Joost. On 17 December 2008, Joost emailed its customers explaining that the project was moving to a website-only model, and that the Joost application would stop working Friday, 19 December. Joost's UK subsidiary was liquidated in 2009. On 24 November 2009, Adconion Media Group announced that they would be purchasing the company's assets for an undisclosed amount. Both companies have
Index Ventures as a major investor. On 30 April 2012 the joost.com website announced, without further explanation: "We are re-evaluating the Joost.com purpose and services. For the near-term, we have decided to suspend the site to allow for a full re-evaluation." Zennstrom has written a post-mortem analysis of the company, in the 2016 book
When Founders Fail. ==See also==