Social networking sites like
MySpace
are among the most popular destinations on the web, attracting millions of
members and millions of dollars in investment.
Are these online communities the future face of Web 2.0, as their proponents
claim, or just another passing fad? What's driving their popularity and how will
they develop in the future?
MySpace boasts more than 100 million members worldwide. According to market
research firm
Hitwise,
MySpace accounts for 4.6 per cent of all visits to US web pages, more than
Yahoo and even
more than
Google.
Facebook,
popular with US college students, generates more page views than
Amazon's US
shop. The UK's most popular social site,
Bebo, boasts 26
million members worldwide.
Big audiences attract big investment. MySpace was bought by Rupert Murdoch's
News
Corporation for $580m in July 2005.
Google bought video-sharing site
YouTube
in October for $1.65bn, while Bebo is rumoured to be in talks with media giant
Viacom at a
price tag close to $1bn.
No one can deny that social networking is the web phenomenon du
jour, especially among the young. That is no surprise: 18-35 year olds are
the most active online and many cannot remember the world before web access.
But online communities are not new. Before the web, academics and computer
nerds used dial-up lines to gather on bulletin-boards. In the US, sites like
Buzz-Oven,
based on the Texas music scene, are as old as the web itself.
The UK's first mass-market taste of social networking was
Friends
Reunited, which provided the low-down on what your old school mates were up
to.
But it is youth-oriented sites like MySpace and Bebo that are growing the
fastest. Alicia, 16, is a member of Bebo, visiting the site sporadically. "You
can put on the music you like, chat, write quizzes, whatever you want," she
says.
Alicia uses Bebo to keep in touch with friends who have moved away, but also
to chat with people she sees every day at school. An erstwhile pen-friend, who
is now a fellow Beboer, is the only online friend she's never met.
A lot of the activity on Bebo and MySpace is about young people establishing
their identity. These are 'my musical tastes', 'pictures of my friends', 'my
likes and dislikes'. This is me. Or at least, the face I want to present.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article