Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Musical Choices of Morons

In the ongoing aftermath of Danah Boyd's paper about MySpace and Facebook users, Mashable looks at some interesting data from the two. They've taken the top music picks from the two sites and compared them. In a disclaimer, they say that they only have access to the Maryland stats on Facebook, not the entire site. Their intent was to be fairly unbiased, and just to report what they found. I don't find their results too surprising. The music preferences on Facebook are what might be considered "classier," in that there aren't rappers in there with songs about shooting people and humping like rabbits. That might not be the best term, but you get what I mean. Taken in a purely stereotypical view, the contrasting musical choices play along quite well with her paper, and with my opinion of MySpace users.

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Monday, June 25, 2007

Semi-Scientific Study Proves My Point...Sorta

I first found this article earlier this morning, but just now have had time to read it. The piece is by Danah Boyd and is titled Viewing American Class Divisions Through MySpace and Facebook. It's a pretty interesting piece, and I encourage you to read it. Personally, I don't feel like I necessarily learned anything new, per se, but it was definitely a good piece. Her basic premise is that the "higher" socio-economic class teens go to Facebook, and the "lower" ones are on MySpace. To this, I say, "Well duh." The interesting part is to see this being said by something that has spent over six months talking to teens around the country and logging thousands of hours online looking at social networking sites. My opinion of these sites are basically based on a few minutes of surfing, and talking to a handful of people. Yet, her conclusion mirrors mine. One of the interesting tidbits she has is a good summary.

The goodie two shoes, jocks, athletes, or other "good" kids are now going to
Facebook. These kids tend to come from families who emphasize education and
going to college. They are part of what we'd call hegemonic society. They are
primarily white, but not exclusively. They are in honors classes, looking
forward to the prom, and live in a world dictated by after school activities.


MySpace is still home for Latino/Hispanic teens, immigrant teens,
"burnouts," "alternative kids," "art fags," punks, emos, goths, gangstas, queer
kids, and other kids who didn't play into the dominant high school popularity
paradigm. These are kids whose parents didn't go to college, who are expected to
get a job when they finish high school. These are the teens who plan to go into
the military immediately after schools. Teens who are really into music or in a
band are also on MySpace. MySpace has most of the kids who are socially
ostracized at school because they are geeks, freaks, or queers.


While I don't think I'd necessarily call the kids on Facebook "goodie two shoes," and she does go on to say she's seen more debauchery on Facebook than MySpace, I think that the point is accurate.

It is very interesting to look at the development of the different social networks, and where they are now. When Friendster first came along, I got my hands on an invite and created my profile. After a few months of being one of two in my network, I started to realize that no one was getting on there.
I avoided MySpace for a long time because I never had a high opinion of it. The ugliness was just too much to make me want to be associated with it. When I finally did create a profile, I immediately replaced the default theme with one that was much cleaner and wrote about how much I hated the site. I even gave links to examples of horrible profiles, and why MySpace should be outlawed. I've since erased everything on my account, and have blocked the MySpace domain. Many of the people I found on MySpace were people that I knew from high school who did not go to college, and with whom I wanted no association because they were morons.
Facebook was a very different story. I was one of the people pushing to get my school added, and once it was I was the 8th person from it to sign up. Upon joining, I already had about two dozens friends there, and this was when there still weren't that many schools. Trying to convince my school colleagues to sign up was a bit harder, though, since when they thought of social networks they thought of MySpace. Now, though, my school has thousands of people on Facebook.

I think that what it comes down to is who got on there first. As Danah mentions, Facebook was founded in the Ivy League schools. It makes sense that it is going to attract the upper educated crowd because likes attract likes. By the same principle, the urban kids that were in bands on MySpace are going to attract their friends.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Where Does This Put Your IQ?

I meant to write this on Sunday or Monday, but was lazy. Then I meant to write about it yesterday, but it was a busy day at work, and when I got home I was distracted.

When I first saw Michael Arrington's post at TechCrunch titled "MySpace v. Facebook: 'It’s Not A Decision. It’s an IQ Test'" my first thought was, "Well duh." When I read it, though, it turns out that he was talking about 3rd party people chosing a network to target. The choice would be between MySpace with its massive user base but unfriendly tactics, or Facebook with its smaller user base and open API which allows developers to keep any revenue they make. If you're a developer, this is a pretty simple decision. Facebook is much more friendly towards 3rd parties, and they have an incredible "stickiness," which refers to how often users are there.

The quote, though, extends to beyond just developers. I think it works for the users too. To give an example, my friend said something along these lines a couple years ago.
I had to join MySpace to be with my friends from high school since you had to go
to college to get on Facebook.
This was, of course, before Facebook opened up to anyone. Even still, though, the type of person that gets on Facebook just seems to be different. I think that this is largely based on Facebook's origins, but I also think it has to do with the way they've made their site. Facebook is a clean, well designed, stable site. It doesn't experience horrible loading speeds, downtimes, or the abilty to have 5 videos load on a page at the same time. The appeal of Facebook is the more intelligent design that went into its creation. The better interface appeals to a more sophisticated crowd. Look at car commercials for an analogy. Kia commercials are loud, flashy, and generally incite homicidial thoughts in me. By contrast, a Lexus commercial is quiet, simple, and makes you feel relaxed. Same concept here. The class of people that get on Facebook are just a different breed than the MySpace crowd.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

MySpace and Facebook in Bed Together?

The last couple of days I have been having some problems with Facebook. For some reason, their stylesheets were not loading, so the site didn’t really work. This aggravated me quite a bit. I really have not used Facebook much lately for anything beyond sharing interesting articles that I don’t post on here. This feature did not work, though, due to the site being broken for me. I first thought that something was being blocked by my ad blocking program. I disabled that, reloaded, and still no avail. I thought maybe there was something wrong with IE, so I switched to Firefox to check, and still no luck. This started on Tuesday, but I had not done anything that could possibly be causing this outcome, so I just assumed it was an oddity and would resolve itself. Yesterday, though, I got a surprise. When I got on in the morning, everything was working fine. However, in the afternoon, when I looked again, it was broken. This time, though, something caught my eye. A bit down the page I had the message telling me the site had been blocked by the administrator. This is the message displayed when you try to access a site that has been blocked at my router. The thing is, I only have one thing blocked there, and that is MySpace. When I logged into the router, remove the block, and checked Facebook again everything worked perfectly. Wanting to test this out, I put the block back, and checked again, but everything was still just fine. As of today, it is still working just fine. So why on earth was I seeing something that could have only happened if something on Facebook was referencing MySpace, but then it just goes away? I’ve been over the source code on the page a couple times, and still have come up with nothing. I am joking when I imply that there is any sort of real link between the two; it just really makes me wonder, though.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

If Corky Decided the News

TechCrunch has an article covering the news venture of MySpace. They lauched it about a month ago, but still have yet to garner much interest. The system works by MySpace gathering stories, and then dividing them out into categories. After they have been divided out, users can visit the different category pages and vote for stories a la Digg. From the sound of the artilce, it doesn't look like they've been able to get any interest at all.

But the front page of MySpace news shows most stories with zero votes. Two
stories have a single vote. None have more than that. Perusing through the
various categories shows the same thing - page after page of stories with no
votes or other evidence that anyone is visiting the site.

I don't know if I should really be all that surprised by this. MySpace consists of two types of users. There are the morons, and the people that are there because their friends are there. The first group is too stupid to even comprehend what important news is, and probably rely on their idiot friends or PerezHilton for world events. The second group, the ones that aren't morons, aren't likely to use MySpace for their place to read the news. More than likely, they are already visiting sites like Google News, Digg, or have an RSS reader for this. To top it all off, to prove just how dumb the admins are MySpace are, they have hardly any advertisement for this new service. According to TechCrunch's article, they don't even have a link for it on their main page (Disclaimer: I can't verify this since I've blocked MySpace). If this service ever does take off, I expect it to be driven by the first category of user so the likelyhood of anything decent showing up is pretty slim.

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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Look Out for This MySpace Predator

An article that I came across is about the lack of knowledge in the general public about the whole Web 2.0 thing, and social networking sites like MySpace or Facebook. However, the part that I find hilarious is the example that brought this to mine. Someone was concerned about a 31 year old pervert befriending hisyoung daughter right after she signed up. He was convinced that the only reason an older man would friend her like that was to try to get it on with her. Upon asking if the daughter perhaps had posted a risque photo, or something else to prompt the pervs, the father responded not at all, and that she hadn't posted anything at all before getting this friend. He says that the guy is a Tom. At this point the author easily sees what is happening and explains that there is no 31 year old stalker out after his daughter.

This raises a good point, though. There is a surprising amount of news and information out there about these sites, yet there still remains a vast lack of knowledge about them in the general public. It goes beyond just web stuff, though. I mentioned something about John Stewart to my mom the other day, and she didn't know anything about him other than hearing his name before. This is a lady that spends hours a day online reading the news. She knows all about MySpace, and the like, and even uses Gaim (now Pidgin) as her IM client. It just goes to show that no matter how much we can try to educate the older generations, some may still never get it. Even Dvorak seems to be out of the loop on some tech stuff.

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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Politics the MySpace Way

I think the best response to this article over at Reuters is, "Noooo!" Apparently, MySpace and Mark Burnett are teaming up to create a new reality show that focuses on creating a politician that represents the young people of America. This has got to be one of the worst idea ever. Lets be honest, the youth in America are a bunch of idiots. On top of this, the part of the article I found most frightening is this part.
The process begins with the close to 100 million unique users who flirt, discuss and attack each other on Rupert Murdoch's online social network MySpace. Those people decide the winner, the losers and their issues on the new show.
That is good thinking. Let the same morons that have five videos load on their page at once and post pictures of themselves in their underwear decide who a good candidate is. I take that back, they probably could pick a good candidate to represent them, but the thing that is bad is that they also get to pick the issues? Do we really need that? If you know me personally, you know that I hate MySpace with a passion. I've gone so far as to not just boycott the site, but actually have the myspace.com domain blocked on my hardware firewall. The thought that these same people are going to be picking someone to represent them is repulsive. Older people already see my generation as a bunch of degenerates (which most are, but that is true of the older generations too), do we really need to just reinforce this? I can hardly wait to see what kind of idiot they wind up picking. I could just be exposed to the wrong groups of young people, but I seem to just encounter a lot of complainers without anyone ever offering realistic alternatives. Even when they complain about things with which I agree I still think they look like idiots. Things will be nice once we finally install my friend into office. Doty in 2032, baby.

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