Remember Myspace? Back in its glory days, it was the go-to social media platform, where users could meet new friends, customize their profiles with glittery wallpaper, and write blog posts, complete ...
Forget Snapchat or Instagram. The new social network of the moment is a shameless MySpace clone, created by a student developer who was only a few years old during that site’s heyday. The new network ...
Myspace, the social network that dominated the early part of this century, has risen from the ashes. Or at least, that's the plan, as Myspace's new website emerges from beta along with a new mobile ...
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8 massive website failures you forgot about
The Internet has been around for decades now, and while many popular websites have lasted, other once-prominent websites are ...
Last month we reported that MySpace managed to lose all music files uploaded to its site between 2003 and 2015. The massive, mind-boggling, and irrevocable loss — estimated to total 50 million songs ( ...
Myspace is back — or at least, an homage to its essence is. During the pandemic, German-born 18-year-old An used some of his newfound time to create a social media platform called SpaceHey, built in ...
When News Corp. bought MySpace in July 2005, it was worth $580 million, at least to Rupert Murdoch. When it sold the site last June, to an advertising network owner called Specific Media, it was for a ...
MySpace is looking to do an about-face. The once-red-hot social networking site acquired three years ago by septuagenarian mogul Rupert Murdoch, which landed him on the cover of Wired magazine and won ...
Musicians and fans across the world this week are lamenting the loss of an estimated 50 million songs that once lived on MySpace. The news brings back bittersweet memories of the creative output that ...
Before Myspace became a social media relic eclipsed by Facebook and Twitter, it helped launch the careers of countless bands, from your friend’s high school emo band to Arctic Monkeys. And now the ...
Is MySpace the next Friendster? The next who? Exactly. Once a social network starts to lose its lustre in comparison with a younger, fresher rival, it's on a slippery slope to obscurity. What MySpace ...
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