SourceForge, founded in 1999 by
VA Software, was the first provider of a centralized location for free and open-source software developers to control and manage software development and offering this service free of charge. and was later named SourceForge Alexandria. The last release under a free license was made in November 2001. After the
dot-com bubble, SourceForge was later powered by the proprietary
SourceForge Enterprise Edition, a separate product re-written in
Java which was marketed for use in
offshore outsourcing. SourceForge has been temporarily banned in
China three times: in September 2002, in July 2008 (for about a month) and on August 6, 2012 (for several days). In November 2008, SourceForge was sued by the French
collection society Société civile des Producteurs de Phonogrammes en France (SPPF) for hosting downloads of the file sharing application
Shareaza. In 2009, SourceForge announced a new site platform known as Allura, which would be an extensible, open source platform licensed under the
Apache License, utilizing components such as
Python and
MongoDB, and offering
REST APIs. In June 2012, the Allura project was donated to the
Apache Software Foundation as Apache Allura. In September 2012, SourceForge,
Slashdot, and
Freecode were acquired from
Geeknet by the online job site
Dice.com for $20 million, and incorporated into a subsidiary known as Slashdot Media. In July 2015, Dice announced that it planned to sell SourceForge and Slashdot, and, in January 2016, the two sites were sold to the San Diego–based BIZX, LLC for an undisclosed amount. In December 2019,
BIZX rebranded as
Slashdot Media. == Installer with adware ==