XenForo

XenForo
Developer(s) XenForo Limited, Kier Darby, Mike Sullivan, Chris Deeming
Initial release March 8, 2011 (2011-03-08)
Stable release 1.5.7
Written in PHP
Operating system Cross Platform
Platform PHP / MySQL
Available in Official support for English
Type Forum software
License Proprietary, commercial
Website http://xenforo.com/

XenForo is a commercial Internet forum software package written in the PHP programming language using the Zend Framework. The software is developed by former vBulletin lead developers Kier Darby and Mike Sullivan. The first public beta release of XenForo was released in October 2010. XenForo 1.0.0 Stable was released on March 8, 2011.[1] XenForo has several SEO features built in. Its popularity is growing, according to feedback from various community forums and weblogs.

On November 12, 2014, Chris Deeming officially joined the development team. One of his products Xen Media Gallery, now XenForo Media Gallery, joined the XenForo family of products. [2]

Development

One of the developers of XenForo, Kier Darby originally served as a lead developer for the community platform vBulletin. The original owner of the software, Jelsoft, was acquired by the American new media company Internet Brands in 2007. Disagreements occurred between the lead developers and the new management over matters involving the next major release of vBulletin, version 4.0. While the team wished to make 4.0 a complete rewrite of the platform, Internet Brands insisted on using agile development atop the existing code instead. These internal conflicts resulted in most of the vBulletin developers stepping down from employment at Internet Brands in 2009. As part of a new team, Darby and other former vBulletin developers began work on a new platform known as XenForo.[3][4]

Internet Brands lawsuits

One day before the originally scheduled release for the first public beta of XenForo in October 2010, Internet Brands announced that it would file a lawsuit against the XenForo team in the UK, claiming; copyright infringement of property acquired by Internet Brands, that code in XenForo was refactored from vBulletin code, breach of contract, and engaging in unfair business practices.[4] Representatives also claimed that XenForo "unfairly stands on the shoulders of more than a decade of development", development which had become the property of Internet Brands through the acquisition. In November 2010, Internet Brands sued XenForo and Darby in California District Court in the United States, additionally claiming that Darby had not returned confidential information from Internet Brands regarding the vBulletin software, though failing to provide evidence to back this claim. The XenForo team has denied the claims made by Internet Brands in these lawsuits. Internet Brands also denied that the timing of the lawsuit was to coincide with the first public beta of the software.[5]

On February 7, 2011, Judge Manuel Real denied all three motions by XenForo and its developer Kier Darby, to dismiss the case on grounds of forum non conveniens, non-subject matter jurisdiction and personal jurisdiction in California arguing that the California lawsuit is duplicative of the UK action. On April 4, 2011, Judge Manuel Real granted a motion by XenForo to dismiss the 7th and 8th claims of the litigation which dealt with alleged violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and California Penal Code § 502[6]

On October 17, 2011, the plaintiff Internet Brands amended their complaint to alter several new allegations based on newly discovered information, and further added new individual defendants to the case, including developer Mike Sullivan and Business Manager Ashley Busby. The defendants' motion to dismiss this amended complaint was denied by the judge.

On January 4, 2012, Judge Manuel Real granted in part and denied in part the defendant's motion to dismiss claims in the amended complaint. The following claims were dismissed: "Violations of California Business and Professional Code", "Conspiracy" and "Violation with regards to RICO". All other claims, including "Violation of CFAA", which was initially denied by the same judge earlier in 2011, remain standing.

On March 26, 2012, the plaintiff cited their intention to issue a third amended complaint to alter claims against developer Mike Sullivan.

Settlement

On February 28, 2013, XenForo announced that the lawsuit had been settled between the parties in both the UK and the US. Although specific terms of the agreement are unclear due to its confidential nature, Internet Brands withdrew both the US and UK lawsuits.[7] As a "Thank you" to customers who patiently awaited the result of the lawsuit, XenForo announced that all license holders with a valid license from June 19, 2012 would receive an additional 255 days of support and download access.[8]

Release history

Legend: Old version Older version, still supported Current version Latest preview version Future release
Version Release date Notable changes Latest release
Old version, no longer supported: 1.0[9] March 8, 2011 Initial release 1.0.4 [10] July 12, 2011
Old version, no longer supported: 1.1[11] November 22, 2011 Topic prefixes, RTL, etc. 1.1.5 [12] May 21, 2013
Older version, yet still supported: 1.2[13] July 30, 2013 Template modification system,[14] route filters (route changing),[15] post edit history and logging[16] 1.2.7 [17] September 16, 2014
Older version, yet still supported: 1.3[18] March 11, 2014 Custom BB codes, Google+/Twitter registration, user change logging, multi-quote, etc. 1.3.9 [19] September 16, 2014
Older version, yet still supported: 1.4[20] September 9, 2014 Selective quoting, sitemap XML generation, thread reply bans, custom help pages, poll improvements, new profile post features, etc. 1.4.11 [21] July 27, 2015
Current stable version: 1.5[22] August 18, 2015 Thread tagging, responsive admin control panel, two-step verification, floating notices, profile post comment improvements, etc. 1.5.7 [23] April 05, 2016
Future release: 2.0[24]

References

External links


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