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[IP] Murdoch's MySpace Now the Most Accessced Service on the Web -- Social Networking Now the Biggest "New Thing"





Begin forwarded message:

From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: July 12, 2006 9:44:44 PM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <dewayne-net@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Murdoch's MySpace Now the Most Accessced Service on the Web -- Social Networking Now the Biggest "New Thing"
Reply-To: dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

[Note:  This item comes from friend John McMullen.  DLH]

From: "John F. McMullen" <observer@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: July 12, 2006 4:20:15 PM PDT
To: "johnmac's living room" <johnmacsgroup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Murdoch's MySpace Now the Most Accessced Service on the Web -- Social Networking Now the Biggest "New Thing"

(johnmac -- Today, on NPR, I heard a discussion of MySpace with the author of the following Wired article. The discussion occured because a research outfit just released statistics saying that MySpace is now the most accessed spot on the World Wide Web. The author of the piece, Spencer Reiss, called the Social Networking evidenced by MySpace the "most disruptive social happening since MTV" There are now 80 million subscribers to the free MySpace Service. Another social networking site is Orkut, affilated with Google. Orkut, which is by invitation only (anyone wishing a gmail or an Orkut invitation may send me an e-mail), has a great variety of topics or "communities", including many hi-tech, business, philosophy, religion, and literature -- I did not find that level of discussion on MySpace.)

From Wired Magazine -- <http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.07/ murdoch.html>

His Space
Twilight of the media moguls? Not for this guy. With the $580 million purchase of MySpace, News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch is betting he can transform a free social network into a colossal marketing machine.
By Spencer Reiss

Perched on the edge of a bright white power sofa on the supernaturally quiet eighth floor of the News Corporations global headquarters, the last thing Rupert Murdoch looks like is a fire-eyed revolutionary. Starched cuffs. Courtly manner. A month past his 75th birthday. But then he starts talking. To find something comparable, you have to go back 500 years to the printing press, the birth of mass media which, incidentally, is what really destroyed the old world of kings and aristocracies. Technology is shifting power away from the editors, the publishers, the establishment, the media elite. Now its the people who are taking control. And hes smiling.

Hold on a minute. Rupert Murdoch is the media elite. His Sixth Avenue office, lined with shelves devoted to dead-tree properties like Londons The Sun and muted video monitors tuned to news channels including News Corp.s Fox and rival CNN, sits squarely within jaywalking distance of NBC, CBS, Time Warner, McGraw-Hill, and Viacom. But these days, midtown Manhattans valley of old media dinosaurs is besieged by a Cambrian explosion of digitally empowered life-forms: podcasters, bloggers, burners, P2P buccaneers, mashup artists, phonecam paparazzi. Viewers are vanishing, shareholders are in revolt, advertisers are Googling for the exit.

Twilight of the moguls, right? Not for the T. rex of mass culture. Were looking at the ultimate opportunity, Murdoch says. The Internet is medias golden age.

Of course, someone juggling $60 billion worth of TV studios, printing presses, and broadcast satellites would say that. But Murdoch has been putting his money where his mouth is and it is his money: His family controls almost a third of News Corp.s voting shares. Over the past year, he has spent nearly $1.5 billion on new-breed Internet companies, including online communities devoted to gaming, sports, and movies, plus a startling eruption of youthful energy known as MySpace. And he has put his lieutenants on notice: The days of top- down, force-fed, one-size-fits-all media are over. The new imperative is to deliver precisely what audiences want, when and where they want it.

How or even whether News Corp. can survive this cold dawn is an open question Wall Street certainly has its doubts. But the man who built the worlds only truly global media company has a classically entrepreneurial answer. Well figure it out, he says, flashing his cat- that-ate-the-canary grin.

One of the great things about being a self-employed billionaire mogul besides traveling in your own Boeing 737 and getting to play yourself on The Simpsons is that you dont have to talk like a management consultant. News Corp. culture is famously seat-of-the- pants; managers who cant live by their wits quickly fall by the wayside. But more than that, Murdoch revels in spotting unfilled gaps and unmet needs. Everything weve ever done is about giving people choices, he says. The Net has a billion people looking for news, sports, and entertainment. Another billion are on mobile phones, and another couple of billion are coming up behind those. Thats a hell of a lot more people making choices.

Right, but how do you keep News Corp. at the center of their decisions? How do you produce planetary hits in a world of umpteen million YouTube videos? How do you find the next Bart Simpson if hes being drawn in someones garage?

Thats where the Internet comes in, specifically MySpace and the millions of young trendsetters who make it the most disruptive force to hit pop culture since MTV. This nonstop global block party of music, video, and hookups is starting to look like the most powerful mass-media launching pad ever invented. To take advantage of that power, though, Murdochs crew faces two challenges. The most immediate is to avoid doing anything that might interfere with the runaway growth that has already made MySpace the biggest aggregation of people on the Web. But thats just step one. Step two is to turn MySpaces teeming masses into a wholly new kind of media entity, an advertising, marketing, and distribution vehicle that gives News Corp. a hand on the steering wheel of popular culture worldwide.

Hi, this is Rupert Murdoch. Ross Levinsohn answered the phone, heard those words, and thought it must be a joke. It was January 2005, and Levinsohn, a 41-year-old veteran of CBS SportsLine.com and AltaVista who was running Fox Sports online operations, had never actually met with the big boss. Got time for a chat? Murdoch asked. Sure. When? How about now?

An hour later, Levinsohn had rustled up a shirt with a collar and was sitting across a table from Murdoch at an employee caf on the old Fox movie lot in Los Angeles, doing a core dump about new media. Levinsohn wondered whether he was about to be fired. Instead, two months later, Murdoch offered him an amazing new gig: Take whoever you want, go wherever you need, and come back with a strategy for making News Corp. a serious presence on the Net.

[snip]

Weblog at: <http://weblog.warpspeed.com>



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