June 9, 2026

Web4Lib Marks 15th Anniversary

It passed with no notice until today, when I realized that Web4Lib began over 15 years ago on May 12, 1994. I marked it with a message to the list, in which I said in part:

"I began [the list] at UC Berkeley to help the Web team there plan for the UC Berkeley
Library web site, which was to replace our Gopher-based Internet information
system. It was modeled on, and inspired by, the Go4Lib list started by
Andrea Duda at UC Santa Barbara.

It has been a sometimes wild and sometimes calm trip since then, with spikes
of active debate over such topics as filtering. Some of us still have scars
to prove it. These controversies also helped shape the management of the
list. We began with few, if any, policies, and accreted them only when
behavior on the list demanded it. I established an Advisory Board of trusted
colleagues to help with questions of policy, and to prevent me from becoming
even more of a tyrant than I already was. The members: Thomas Dowling, Karen
Schneider, and Bernie Sloan have all served since the beginning of the
Board, and have provided essential advice and support for many years.

List membership grew quickly in the early years, and seemed to plateau for a
while at around 3,200 subscribers. Today we are at 4,746 subscribers. For a
while I was able to break down the membership by country or domain, which
you can view at http://lists.webjunction.org/web4lib/subscribers.html. I
haven’t done it recently, but suffice it to say that we are not surprisingly
dominated by subscribers from the U.S., Canada, and the English-speaking
world, although our subscriber base hails from many countries the world
over.

A number of years ago, and well before I joined OCLC, I migrated the list
from the SunSITE server at Berkeley, which was on a slow decommission path,
to the welcoming arms of WebJunction. This established a home for it that
could continue without me or my place of employment continuing to commit to
maintain it."

It’s nice to look back and realize that it has had a useful place in the lives of so many library professionals for so long. I know what I’ve learned from it myself has been invaluable, and has more than paid me back for the work managing it. Although we have many more ways to keep up to date, from sites like Facebook to services like Twitter, I still value mailing lists, and it seems that many of you do too.

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Roy Tennant About Roy Tennant

Roy Tennant is a Senior Program Officer for OCLC Research. He is the owner of the Web4Lib and XML4Lib electronic discussions, and the creator and editor of Current Cites, a current awareness newsletter published every month since 1990. His books include "Technology in Libraries: Essays in Honor of Anne Grodzins Lipow" (2008), "Managing the Digital Library" (2004), "XML in Libraries" (2002), "Practical HTML: A Self-Paced Tutorial" (1996), and "Crossing the Internet Threshold: An Instructional Handbook" (1993). Roy wrote a monthly column on digital libraries for Library Journal for a decade and has written numerous articles in other professional journals. In 2003, he received the American Library Association's LITA/Library Hi Tech Award for Excellence in Communication for Continuing Education. Follow him on Twitter @rtennant.