News Corp Sells MySpace for $35 Million My Take: Social Networking will continue to thrive for a long time. The only way we'll see social networking become a fad would be the ability to literally traverse anywhere in the world through the comfort of your home. In the meantime, social media will continue to thrive on the mean of communications by unreachable areas.
I think you're right about online social networking in general, but I think MySpace has been on the way out for a long time now. One of my friends joked that this sale price values the company at about $1 million per active user.
Obviously. I just deleted my MySpace account this past weekend and I have no regrets. I don't see a reason to get back on it. I don't have Facebook, nor Twitter. However, I may consider getting back on Facebook sometime in the future.
I am on Facebook, but I refuse to do anything called "tweeting." MySpace was an innovator at one point, but being first is not always best - ask the British who developed the tank, only to see its use perfected by the Germans.
What was the first one that pioneered social networking in general? AOL was a great lender with instant messaging and customizing your own page. But could that count as the first?
How can you forget BlackPlanet! The 4th oldest social networking site ever! The oldest being SixDegrees.com, the 2nd oldest being LiveJournal and 3rd oldest being AsianAvenue.
Check this out! The guys who started Myspace were quoted in Business Week magazine saying that they looked at BlackPlanet as a model for Myspace and thought there was an opportunity to do a general market version of what BlackPlanet was. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BlackPlanet