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Friendster, the social network that has been forgotten by many in the U.S., but which is thriving in Asia, is now opening its own developer platform, copying the move recently by popular site ...
Friendster, now based in San Francisco, was founded by Abrams in Mountain View, Calif., in 2003 as a "social experiment." The early network enjoyed a large following initially, but by the end of ...
Friendster hires longtime TV exec Scott Sassa to be CEO and president, in a move to reclaim the company's title as online social-networking captain amid rising competition.
Still, Internet monitoring company comScore reports Friendster traffic in Southeast Asia dropped from 32.6 million unique monthly visitors in August 2008 to 13.7 million this August, while ...
Just when you thought the Friendster.com craze had ended – it’s Friendster the movie. The same producers who brought you films like “The Big Chill” and “Reality Bites&… ...
Friendster wouldn’t be the weirdly vital relic that it is—wouldn’t be, period—without them both. Correction, March 5, 2009: This piece originally misspelled the first name of model/actress ...
Friendster, an early online social network, has begun letting programmers create photo-sharing applications and other programs that work on Friendster as well as rival sites.
It's not likely to happen here in the States for quite some time, but the venerable ol' YASN Friendster has been trialling a mobile version of its social networking service in the Philippines, and ...
While Friendster has sputtered out in the U.S. (it's a distant runner-up to social networking groups like Facebook and MySpace, controlled by U.S. billionaires Mark Zuckerberg and Rupert Murdoch ...
Friendster proves that despite strong, and some would argue superior competition, there’s still room for any Web 2.0 startup to grow, even in a crowded vertical marketplace.
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