Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password

MySpace Allows Users to Share Profiles with other Sites



By Rafael Diaz
08 May 2008 @ 05:44 pm EST

The Internet's most popular social networking site MySpace will soon allow their members to share their public profile information on other online services.



A screen grab of MySpace.com. One of the biggest new-media sensations to emerge from last year were music-related widgets -- mini-applications that allowed members of social networking services like MySpace or Facebook to customize their profiles with such music features as streamed playlists and tour calendars with links to ticket sales
1 of 1

Related Topic

Get stories by e-mail on this topic.

  • myspace | RSS
  • yahoo | RSS
  • facebook | RSS
  • social network | RSS
E-mail:
Quotes
NWS 14.76 0.12
YHOO 21.35 0.47
EBAY 26.8 -0.31
MSFT 25.98 0.1

SYMBOL LOOKUP

MySpace aims to give users the power to decide to share their personal information like pictures, videos, and text on third party services. They are going to support web services owned by Yahoo, Photobucket, eBay and Twitter. Like MySpace, the photo-sharing site Photobucket is a unit of News Corp.

The "Data Availability" move makes MySpace open to working with arch-rival Facebook, which is the second largest social-networking site with 109 million unique visitors, after MySpace which has 117 million.

"MySpace no longer operates as an isolated island on the Internet. The walls around the garden are coming down," said MySpace chief executive Chris DeWolfe.

"We, alongside our data availability launch partners, are pioneering a new way for the global community to integrate their social experiences Web-wide."

MySpace members will be able to select which personal details to transfer using mini-applications installed on partner websites, so that they don't have to re-enter all that information again.

Altogether, the participating sites have 150 million users and reach 85 percent of the Internet market in the United States.

"We believe that the more open and the more social the Internet becomes the better it is for MySpace," DeWolfe said during a conference call with news reporters.

"We are happy to work with Facebook if they want to join up with us on this project, as with any group that wants to work with us."

Microsoft already owns 1.6 percent of Facebook, following a $240 million investment last year, which valued the social networking site at $15 billion.

This article is copyrighted by International Business Times.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

You must be an IBTimes member to post a comment. Login | Register


advertisement
More Technology
Rant all you want in a public park. A police officer generally won't eject you for your remarks alone, however unpopular or provocative. Say it on the In...
Internet company Terra says it has been awarded Internet and mobile rights to transmit the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in Latin America. Terra says its Ol...
Auto industry cutbacks, double-digit unemployment and one of the nation's highest home foreclosure rates have left Detroit with a dreary economic future....

Advertisement
Corporate Website Design

Professional Website Design For Corporate - Get a Free Quote Today

advertisement
 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2008 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives