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MySpace — the once-dominant social media platform that was largely subsumed by Facebook — may have lost a decade's worth of music uploaded by users, the company says.
So, what was Myspace, exactly? Well, your profile page was like an expression of your total personality. People chatted on forums, listened to music, published emo blog posts and even dressed it ...
And Myspace’s account recovery form didn’t actually check to see if you entered the correct email address. The Verge tested the flaw on a newly created dummy account and was able to confirm this.
Experts say newest move may be sign of social network's last gasp. Feb. 1, 2008 — -- "Are you on MySpace?" For those college-age or older, the answer may be increasingly no, coupled with a ...
MySpace now may be the butt of all social media jokes, but there was a time before Facebook, from 2005 to 2008, where it was the de facto social media website. In fact, MySpace was once the number ...
Gen Z is turning back the digital age clock. Tiffany Zhong spent the last decade studying social media habits and used the information to create the Gen Z version of Myspace, called Nospace.
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 ...
As widely reported today, MySpace announced yesterday that it is firing nearly 500 employees, or about half its workforce, after a sustained loss of users and dollars. Tim Arango’s article in ...
"Myspace helps individuals and artists manage their presence, find their audience, collaborate with like minds, and grow." ComScore's report says between 2013 and 2014, the site grew 469 percent ...
“Myspace accidentally lost all the music uploaded from its first 12 years in a server migration, losing over 50 million songs from 14 million artists,” Baio wrote on Twitter.
Traffic to Myspace last month plunged 44% from a year earlier to 37.7 million unique U.S. visitors, its lowest monthly total since February 2006, according to comScore Inc.
Short answer: There’s still a Web site called “Myspace,” but it does almost none of the things that it did when you last used it, c. 2008.