MySpace, Twitter Display Danger of Coolness
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When MySpace popped up in the news headlines this week, I felt a jolt of nostalgia. I thought back to those long-ago days of 2005, when Rupert Murdoch and News Corp.(NWS Quote) shelled out a half-billion dollars to buy the site that helped set off the social-networking craze. Back then, to be familiar with MySpace (or, even better, to have your own page there) was a sign of pop-culture savvy. It showed you knew what was cool.
Fast-forward four years. In the past week, MySpace announced that it's laying off 30% of its U.S. workforce, followed by two-thirds of its international staff. I realize it's been a long time since anyone referred me to their MySpace page.
Instead, all the buzz lately has been for Twitter. It got a major boost this spring, when an "Oprah" episode centered on Oprah Winfrey's debut "tweet," messages sent through the service. More recently, it's been credited with fostering freedom of speech, as real-time reports on political protests filtered out from Iran. ...
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