geekhack Marketplace > Drop

Acquired by Corsair

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Findecanor:
Apparently, Corsair has bought Drop now ...
... and Drop owns Geekhack. Which means that Corsair owns Geekhack.

Corsair's press-release:

--- Quote ---Drop will remain a separate brand within CORSAIR and all existing warranties, purchases and customer support requests will continue to be handled directly by the team at Drop.
--- End quote ---

Drop's blog:

--- Quote ---Drop will continue as a brand, team and community within Corsair.  You may already know that Corsair also owns Elgato, Origin and SCUF brands, which continue to operate independently.
--- End quote ---

Edit: Posted on Reddit (/r/mechanicalkeyboards):

--- Quote ---[–]drop_official Drop / Massdrop [score hidden] 41 minutes ago
geekhack, being under the Drop umbrella, was included in the purchase. We expect no changes to geekhack for the time being, but will of course share if/when that changes.
--- End quote ---

Coreda:
Hopefully gh can just continue chugging along

ArchDill:
I came here to see if anyone has mentioned it yet. CRAZY

Rhienfo:
Saw it on on discord but this could have massive implications but it's probably not, I don't think corsair even cares about GH but probably does know it now due to seeing drop's business purchases. However if they do influence gh it may do some serious damage to the platform. I hope that gh can keep moving on despite this, but this probably is nothing.

Corsair didn't purchase drop to take control over geekhack. Drop still has a brand/mainstream appeal in the holy thock, pe foam, hipyo tech normie areas that most people who build keyboards interact with, and has assets/experience that could be useful for corsair to build a "premium" line of keyboards for that audience. Their target audience is definitely not a niche group of people who know a lot about keyboards on an old forum that some people find confusing to use. So I feel that it might be another drop situation, where they just don't do anything to the platform because they know of the backlash/not the target audience.

My main concern is corsair trying to monetize this platform, by putting ads and using the personal data to personalize those ads which could ruin the user experience of the platform without an adblock. However this may be me fearmongering. From a business perspective, I wouldn't touch a platform that would just die if any changes were made to it, to squeeze out a very limited amount of money from a small group that would be more trouble and money than it's worth to change it in the first place (however businesses often never focus on the long term so be cautious)

I think we should be very cautious and push back when necessary, but I feel that it's unlikely that something will happen to the Geekhack. Would like to know other people's thoughts on this.

HoffmanMyster:

--- Quote from: Rhienfo on Tue, 18 July 2023, 21:06:11 ---Corsair didn't purchase drop to take control over geekhack. Drop still has a brand/mainstream appeal in the holy thock, pe foam, hipyo tech normie areas that most people who build keyboards interact with, and has assets/experience that could be useful for corsair to build a "premium" line of keyboards for that audience. Their target audience is definitely not a niche group of people who know a lot about keyboards on an old forum that some people find confusing to use. So I feel that it might be another drop situation, where they just don't do anything to the platform because they know of the backlash/not the target audience.

--- End quote ---

I think this is by far the most likely outcome; continue to operate the site as-is and don't rock the boat. It's still early enough in the transition process that we don't know exactly if anything might change long term, but I will relay any news and updates as applicable.

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