In its early years, the organization was one of several vying to be the premiere internet awards show. Both shows would compare themselves to the Oscars, as did media outlets such as
The New York Times to Canada's
Globe & Mail. The winners of the First Annual Webby Awards in 1995 were presented by
John Brancato and Michael Ferris, writers for
Columbia Pictures. It was held at the
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. The televised Webby Awards were sponsored by the Academy of Web Design and
Cool Site of the Day. The first Webby Awards were produced by Kay Dangaard at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel as a nod to the first site of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars). That first year, they were called "Webbie" Awards. The first "Site of the Year" winner was the pioneer webisodic serial
The Spot. The modern Webby Awards were co-founded by
Tiffany Shlain, a filmmaker, when she was hired by
The Web Magazine to re-establish them, and were first held in San Francisco in 1997. They quickly became known for its requirement that winners give their acceptance speeches in five words. After this, the awards became more successful than the magazine and IDG closed the publication. Shlain and co-founder Maya Draisin Farrah continued to run The Webby Awards until 2004. The
International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences, which selects the winners of The Webby Awards, was established in 1998 by co-founders
Tiffany Shlain, Spencer Ante and Maya Draisin. Members of the Academy include
Kevin Spacey,
Grimes,
Questlove, Internet inventor
Vint Cerf,
Instagram's Head of Fashion Partnerships
Eva Chen, comedian
Jimmy Kimmel,
Twitter founder
Biz Stone,
Vice Media co-founder and CEO
Shane Smith,
Tumblr's
David Karp, Director of Harvard's
Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society Susan P. Crawford,
Refinery29's Executive Creative Director Piera Gelardi, and CEO and co-founder of
Gimlet Media Alex Blumberg. The Webby Awards is owned and operated by the Webby Media Group, a division of Recognition Media, which also owns and produces the
Lovie Awards in Europe and Netted by the Webbys, a daily email publication launched in 2009. David-Michel Davies, CEO of Webby Media Group, current Executive Director of the Webby Awards and co-founder of Internet Week New York, was named Executive Director of the Webby Awards in 2005. In 2009, the 13th Annual Webby Awards received nearly 10,000 entries from all 50 US states and over 60 countries. That same year, more than 500,000 votes were cast in The Webby People's Voice Awards. In 2012, the 16th Annual Webby awards received 1.5 million votes from more than 200 countries for the People's Voice awards. In 2015, the 19th Annual Webby Awards received nearly 13,000 entries from all 50 U.S. states and over 60 countries worldwide. == Nomination process ==