
Earthlink
IT services, network and communications provider headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia.
- Telecommunication
Date | Investors | Amount | Round |
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investor investor investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
N/A | €0.0 | round | |
N/A | €0.0 | round | |
N/A | €0.0 | round | |
investor | €0.0 | round | |
investor | €0.0 | round | |
investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
investor | €0.0 Valuation: €0.0 | round | |
* | $330m Valuation: $330m | Acquisition | |
Total Funding | 000k |







Related Content
In 1994, the internet was a frontier, complex and inaccessible to most. Frustrated by an 80-hour ordeal just to get online, a 23-year-old named Sky Dayton decided to build a better on-ramp. He founded EarthLink in his Los Angeles garage with a simple premise: make internet access easy and provide friendly customer service. The company offered a flat-rate, unlimited access model, a novel concept at the time. The strategy worked. By putting its software on the desktops of new computers from companies like Apple and CompUSA, EarthLink grew rapidly. The company went public on the NASDAQ in January 1997, raising capital to fuel its expansion. A major turning point came in 2000 with the merger of its rival, MindSpring, founded by Charles Brewer. This strategic combination created the second-largest Internet Service Provider in the U.S., a serious challenger to the dominant America Online. The new entity, headquartered in Atlanta, kept the EarthLink name but was run by a combined executive team. As the internet evolved from dial-up to broadband, EarthLink adapted, acquiring other ISPs and expanding into services like DSL, web hosting, and eventually, fiber and wireless internet. The company's journey included a significant acquisition by Windstream Holdings in 2017 for $1.1 billion, followed by a sale to private equity firm Trive Capital in 2019.
Tech stack
Investments by Earthlink
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