Whatever Happened to MySpace? (triblive.com) 64
In 2006 MySpace reportedly became America's most-visited web site — passing both Google and Yahoo Mail.
So what happened? TribLive reports: The co-founders, Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe, sold MySpace to Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation for $580 million in 2005, and that company sold it to the online advertising company Specific Media and Justin Timberlake in 2011, which later became the ad tech firm Viant, according to SlashGear. Viant was bought by Time in 2016, which was acquired by Meredith Corporation at the end of 2017, according to The Guardian. Meredith then sold Myspace to Viant Technology LLC, which currently operates the platform, SlashGear said.
During its time under Timberlake, Myspace morphed from a social media platfrom and turned over a new leaf as a music discovery site, SlashGear reported. The once booming online atmosphere has turned into a ghost town, according to The Guardian. Despite the number of people on Myspace dwindling, a handful of devoted users remains.
The glory days of MySpace drew this bittersweet remembrance from TechRadar: Not everyone on the TechRadar team looks back on those early MySpace years fondly, with our US editor in chief Lance Ulanoff recalling that it "it was like peoples' brains had been turned inside out and whatever didn't stick, dropped onto the page and was represented as a GIF".
Many of us do, though, remember picking our Top 8s (the site's weird ranking system for your friends) and decorating our MySpace pages with as many flashing lights as possible.
So what happened? TribLive reports: The co-founders, Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe, sold MySpace to Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation for $580 million in 2005, and that company sold it to the online advertising company Specific Media and Justin Timberlake in 2011, which later became the ad tech firm Viant, according to SlashGear. Viant was bought by Time in 2016, which was acquired by Meredith Corporation at the end of 2017, according to The Guardian. Meredith then sold Myspace to Viant Technology LLC, which currently operates the platform, SlashGear said.
During its time under Timberlake, Myspace morphed from a social media platfrom and turned over a new leaf as a music discovery site, SlashGear reported. The once booming online atmosphere has turned into a ghost town, according to The Guardian. Despite the number of people on Myspace dwindling, a handful of devoted users remains.
The glory days of MySpace drew this bittersweet remembrance from TechRadar: Not everyone on the TechRadar team looks back on those early MySpace years fondly, with our US editor in chief Lance Ulanoff recalling that it "it was like peoples' brains had been turned inside out and whatever didn't stick, dropped onto the page and was represented as a GIF".
Many of us do, though, remember picking our Top 8s (the site's weird ranking system for your friends) and decorating our MySpace pages with as many flashing lights as possible.
Bah! (Score:4, Funny)
Bah... MySpace... newbies!
Real Net veterans had a Geocities page where <blink>/</blink> was mandatory for any text greater than <h3></h3>.
Ah... happy days!
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Geocities was for fools. Real net surfers danced across favoured web rings.
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Pfft Freeyellow and Intelcities is were it was at and running MS Personal webserver on my 33.6 dialup.
My old Geocities site from 1997 is still on the GC archives.
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World Wide Web? Newbies. I still long for the glory days of Usenet.
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Finger.
Re:Bah! (Score:4, Funny)
blink and marquee tags.
(Which also formed part of my arsenal for horrifying the graphic designer at work. Though my most evil creation for waterboarding our graphic designer involved discovering you could use CSS to tilt the entire page about 1 degree to the left, which made everything look slightly unaligned without making it obvious why it looked that way.)
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My original website was at myisp.com/~username. I think then it was ccs.university.edu/~username and then finally the domain I registered sometime in the late 90s, which I still keep around for email and to host files I need remote access to.
TBH (Score:5, Insightful)
This site doesn't seem to be quite what it was in 2006, either.
SpaceBook (Score:2)
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I had an account... (Score:2)
I had an account on Friendster, but it was badly managed, and had some technical issues. :(
Before that I was on Delphi in some of the groups...loved the menu driven, text interface especially in the era of dial-up modem. :)
JoshK.
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The last time I ever thought about Friendster was in late 2009 when the Onion had a video: Internet Archaeologists Find Ruins Of 'Friendster' Civilization [theonion.com]
With three ad breaks in 2m30s, I don't think I'll be watching this video again for at least another 15 years.
Follow up: (Score:2)
What ever happened to CompuServe?
I kind of miss the old ('90's) internet. Largely useless... but a hell of a lot less creepy and paranoid. But this cat video my sister sent me today...
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Re:Follow up: (Score:5, Informative)
CompuServe always cost too much when compared to other services like Prodigy and, notably, Delphi.
America Online bought CompuServe and, after several years, shut down CompuServe's weird text-only 36-bit service in favor of "CompuServe 2000" which was just AOL with different branding, or "Chrome" as AOL called it.
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CompuServe always cost too much when compared to other services like Prodigy and, notably, Delphi.
America Online bought CompuServe and, after several years, shut down CompuServe's weird text-only 36-bit service in favor of "CompuServe 2000" which was just AOL with different branding, or "Chrome" as AOL called it.
Compuserve was geared toward IBM PC experienced users from the business world. People that were comfortable with DOS, spreadsheets, and other business productivity programs. AOL and Prodigy were more marketed towards the general public just buying computers for the first time. There was a huge culture difference. Compuserve heavily emphasized things like online stock tracking, while the others were pushing the social aspect of their services, mainly their chat rooms. That's what I mainly miss about 90's int
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When I started work as a systems administrator in 1994 I was given a CompuServe account to use. The company president had no issues with how much I used it but I rarely did, only when necessary. I couldn't believe the bill that could rack up from just mild use. A little over a year later I connected the company to the Internet and told the president we didn't need a CompuServe account any longer. Then I was tasked with writing the company's first web page ... ugh. HTML is an abomination.
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I dunno, I started my online experience in CompuServe and it was a great resource for accessing newsgroups - I basically learned to code there.
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It was expensive, but I agree on the utility at the time. It was also a great stepping stone to the modern Internet.
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In soviet Russia (Score:5, Funny)
What ever happened to Quantum Link? (Score:2)
If you had a C64, it was ahead of its time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: What ever happened to Quantum Link? (Score:2)
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it literally became AOL. Yes, AOL. The company was formed as Quantum Computing Services, and then opened to PC users in 1989 as America Online
Last I checked... (Score:2)
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When you go back, you might notice that virtually all of the music on MySpace was "accidentally" deleted since then.
Well, they accidentally deleted a decade of music (Score:2)
Well, they "accidentally" deleted a decade of music a few years ago, so there's that little tidbit of history to consider.
Facebook ate their lunch (Score:2)
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they were an influx of casuals, which for all the moaning still wasn't joe sixpack
at that point it was still only nerds "loitering" online, joe would take care of some business (including porn) and be done with the computer
myspace septembers tipped that "only nerds loitering" barrier, the internet wasn't just a tool anymore
this was the shift of the appeal, but it wasn't until the mobile era (everything As A Service, autoupdates, Mother May I phoning home, ubiquitous wifi, etc) that the means were dumbed dow
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Facebook is now covered with ads as well, but they do a good job disguising it.
Re:Facebook ate their lunch (Score:5, Interesting)
Malay2bowman misspoke:
Once they opened the site up to the general public, it's popularity took off and because of that, it turned into a cesspit. Basically another "eternal September" like when AOL users were let loose on Usenet in September of 1993, but even most "AOLers" weren't *that* low class. :-|
AOL didn't open the gates of Hell, flooding the Internet with clueless, unwashed dimwits, until September-ish1994.
I remember the horrifying event - and its timing - well, because LAN Times (a McGraw-Hill biweekly publication devoted mainly to servicing the Novell NetWare community) began publishing my @internet column in early April that year.
@internet began as a kind of "Baedeker's for the Internet," aimed at my peers in the Novell universe, who regularly assured me that they knew the Internet was important, but didn't have the time to figure out how to use it by themselves. It was a wildly successful feature that started my career in computer journalism - entirely by accident, after I cornered LAN Times' then-editor-in-chief, Susan Breidenbach, at the SFNUG Christmas party in December 1993 to urge her to initiate just such a regular feature. (Silly me, I expected that, were I successful in pitching the idea, she would assign it to one of her existing staffers, and I could bask in the virtuous feeling of having done a Good Thing for my fellow LAN administrators. Imagine my surprise when she replied, "It sounds like something that could be worth trying. So, when can I expect your first column?" instead.)
AOL's horrible, primitive Web browser (Windows-only, if you please) was nonetheless capable of allowing a million and a half entirely-unprepared newbies to stumble around on the Web without a clue among them about how to behave on the Internet. Overnight, it was as if what had been a relatively-civilized community of relatively-clueful, mostly-techie users was invaded by ignorant, barbarian hordes tromping through our marble palaces with muddy boots, blinking stupidly, and drooling all over the furniture.
It was an utterly classic illustration of the tragedy of the commons - and the experience has been branded in my soul, ever since ...
Back in my day, we used bulletin board messages (Score:1)
Real bulletin boards, with cork and pins and handwritten notes.
I would say "get off my lawn" but lawns hadn't been invented yet.
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"I would say "get off my lawn" but lawns hadn't been invented yet."
I think lawns were invented before bulletin boards.
Re: Back in my day, we used bulletin board message (Score:2)
They went the way of the Solarians (Score:1)
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People started adding many HTML elements which grind older computers to a halt. Fancy animations, animated cursors, changing the scrollbar, flashing overlays.
Heh yeah those other people. Lmao stop pretending you weren't there stealing creds.
Parasitism is a tough racket. (Score:2)
No easy way to put it. (Score:2)
It died. Everyone involved with it was murdered.
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It died. Everyone involved with it was murdered.
The answer to "What happened to MySpace?" is: Facebook
Facebook did the same thing but much better. Simple as that. Facebook had a leader, love him or hate him, with a singular vision for the platform, and he ate MySpace alive.
This is what happened to MySpace: (Score:5, Insightful)
The founder(s) cashed out, epic style, to the tune of half a billion dollars or something like that.
They took the money and ran and never looked back.
AFAIK the principal founder even avoided any silicon valley projects from there on out and is living his life as a wealthy privateer doing what ever he wants and avoiding tech-hypes like the plaque.
And all that is about as smart a move that you can make if you ask me.
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AFAIK the principal founder even avoided any silicon valley projects from there on out and is living his life as a wealthy privateer doing what ever he wants and avoiding tech-hypes like the plaque.
Privateer, noun[c], a privately owned armed vessel commissioned by a belligerent state to attack enemy ships, usually vessels of commerce.
I'd not heard about that but whatever floats his boat really.
Here's a story of a tech guy... (Score:2)
who could have been a privateer, literally: Doug Humphrey and his ex-British Royal Navy warship. [wired.com]
Need to ask (Score:3)
Ha ha! (Score:2)
Many of us do, though, remember picking our Top 8s (the site's weird ranking system for your friends) and decorating our MySpace pages with as many flashing lights as possible.
Ha ha! We were so stupid then, weren't we?
Thank God that we replaced all that with the cultural erudition, dignified restraint, and understated elegance of, say, TikTok ...
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It was annoying (Score:2)
Never had an account there (Score:2)
Been there a couple of times maybe, following some link or other.
Every page seems to be different, and I recall having to always mute my speakers.
And the blinky blinky stuff ............. oh my ......
But I understand it got a bunch of people interested in tech / making websites, etc. So I guess it wasn't all bad.
Simply not truth (Score:1)
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Surprised nobody mentioned it.... (Score:1)
But, spacehey is a good representation of the old myspace.
What it showed (Score:2)
It gave people the opportunity to be creative and it showed that 99% of the population is not creative and just produces mostly repetitive crap.
I'll just leave this here... (Score:1)
https://spacehey.com/ [spacehey.com]
"Many of us do, though, remember picking our..." (Score:2)
"...Top 8s (the site's weird ranking system for your friends) and decorating our MySpace pages with as many flashing lights as possible."
I also remember that MySpace didn't fiddlefuck with your feed, stuffing advertising, sponsored garbage, and shit you never asked for like Facebook does. At least when you went to MySpace and hit a friend's profile, you saw their posts in a proper chronological order without all that other crap.