What MySpace Doesn't Want You To Know

Tags: MySpace + News Corp. + Trent Lapinski + Tom Anderson + Chris DeWolfe + eUniverse

ToPo
ToPo posted on Sep 11th 2006 11:19AM; via valleywag.com/tech/myspace/wha...
What MySpace Doesn't Want You To Know

About four months ago Trent Lapinski was hired by an online publisher as a freelance journalist to write an article detailing the history and business model of MySpace.com. Due to groundless legal implications, the article he had written was no longer to be published. Here you have the article published by Nick Douglas @ Valleywag:

1. MySpace is NOT a viral success. MySpace was advertised on mass levels to reach the public. MySpace was created by a company named eUniverse (who later changed their name to Intermix Media). eUniverse was a marketing and entertainment company who had over 50 million e-mail addresses in their databases, as well as over 18 million monthly web users. eUniverse leveraged their resources to proliferate and advertise MySpace.com. eUniverse went as far as telling 3 million users of their paid dating website, CupidJunction.com, to sign up for free MySpace accounts. (CupidJunction message screenshot)

2. MySpace.com is Spam 2.0. MySpace has spawned an incredibly successful twist on the age-old art of self-promotion, allowing--even encouraging--the marketing of everything from bands to businesses on their site. Essentially, they've opened up a channel through which to solicit and promote everyone and everything, most importantly the individual. The whole site is, in essence, a marketing tool that everyone who registers has access to. Users constantly receive spam-like messages from said bands, business, and individuals looking to add more "friends" (and therefore more potential fans, consumers, or witnesses) to their online identity. A testament to this strange new social paradigm is the phrase "Thanks for the Add," a nicety offered when one MySpace user adds another as a friend. Best yet, to use the site, members must log in, causing them to inadvertently view advertisements, and then read their messages on a page with even more advertisements. In the world of MySpace, Spam is earth, air, fire, and water.

3. Tom Anderson did NOT create MySpace. Most users don't know that Tom Anderson (pictured) is more of a PR scheme than anything else--the mascot designed to give a friendlier feel to a site created by a marketing company known for viral entertainment websites, pop-up advertising, spam, spyware, and adware. As MySpace's popularity grew, the MySpace team moved to create a false PR story that would best reflect the ideals and tastes of its growing demographic. They wanted to prevent the revelation that a Spam 1.0 company had launched the site, and created the impression that Tom Anderson created the site, and the lie worked. According to Anderson, the bulk of his initial contribution is as follows: "I am as anti-social as they come, and I've already got 20 people to sign up."

4. MySpace's CEO Chris DeWolfe is connected to a past of spam and shady business associates and brought those connections to eUniverse/MySpace (see full edition for details).

5. MySpace was a direct assault on Friendster.com. The major key players in the ultimate development of MySpace have Friendster accounts, and name Friendster and its founder in their original business proposal. The current CEO of MySpace, Chris DeWolfe has been a member of Friendster since June of 2003 (MySpace was not conceived until August of 2003).

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Comments

MarcoPolo

MarcoPolo says:

nothing new here, check this article from 2003:

According to a tip today, MySpace.com, a literal photocopy of the Friendster site, is actual a service provided by the NASDAQ-delisted eUniverse.com.

If so this would be the first time a established company has knocked off the popular software. eUniverse is famous for microsites with millions of members. They have millions of emails of the people who live between NY, San Fran and LA. In other words they could build up a Friendster service quickly.

So, the PR person for eUniverse called us back in, ummm, 10 seconds. He says "what's up", to our email asking if they are behind MySpace.com. So I say "do you own MySpace.com", he says "why", I say I want to know, he says "are you working on a story", I say "would I be calling if I wasn't." He says "I'll get right back to you."

Like Christopher Walken in True Romance, I can always tell when someone is lying… and he was lying to me.

Oh yeah, we looked up who owned MySpace.com (eUniverse is in LA too; the phone number is a voice jail number):

MySpace.com (YTQERVKHGD)
2461 Santa Monica Blvd.
Suite 513
Santa Monica, CA 90404
US
Domain Name: MYSPACE.COM

Administrative Contact, Technical Contact:
MySpace.com, MySpace.com ContactMiddleName (21586523I) info@myspace.com
MySpace.com
2461 Santa Monica Blvd.
Suite 513
Santa Monica, CA 90404
US
310-258-2751

http://socialsoftware.w...-com-from/
Posted: 09/11/06 11:42

Guest

Jason Bates - Lushable.com says:

i read this on valleywag ages ago, its hilarious! hahaha
Posted: 04/07/08 21:31

Guest

dan sekula says:

so what,all the internet is advertising.
Posted: 04/12/08 11:30

Guest

Disco says:

I've recently heard that YouTube.com is riding on the back of the internet community's weakness for media in the form of VIDEO! You will also be shocked to hear that Google, despite appearing to be an indispensable resource for searching indexed content on the net, is making MONEY from advertising and Facebook KNOWS WHO YOUR FRIENDS ARE!!!

I recently performed a search on Yahoo! and found that when you enter the words "White House" you get exactly the same website proposed as if you were to perform the same search using MSN.com - Yahoo! existed long before MSN therefore... you know... read the article above, it's terrifying.

Please click HERE to donate to an advertising firm of your choice.

What is the point of this article?
Posted: 05/13/08 15:52

Guest

Ryan Kelly says:

@Disco: The purpose of the article is to alert people of what MySpace is really doing and what they really did. That should be pretty obvious just from the title of the article.

I think that without eUniverse's dirty, but briliant, marketing, MySpace would not be nearly as big as it is today. All in all, the whole network is crappy. There are so many issues with the design that in order to make it run right without re-coding the whole thing, they must institute about 100 modifications per week. The developers were ultimately stupid when they started this whole thing, as they didn't even start knowing how to write HTML.
Posted: 06/01/08 22:28

Guest

Chris says:

This isn't exactly shocking. Every website that has ever been made (with the exception of a few organizations' websites) has been made for money, and that money usually comes in the form of advertising if the website isn't selling you a service. There's nothing particularly dishonest or corrupt about it. That's just the way that business works.
Posted: 06/02/08 09:57

Guest

choas says:

this article isn't focusing on the money-making, it's more about myspace's false origion story.
Posted: 06/05/08 21:11

Guest

jonathan says:

It's all so true. It is all a little too scary to think about facebook and relations between these web promotors. In all honesty though at the end of the day you do what you want anyway and it just comes down to your point of view huh?
Posted: 06/11/08 19:59

Guest

promotors. In all honesty though says:

o true. It is all a little too scary to think about facebook and relations between these
Posted: 07/17/08 16:19

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