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E-Media Tidbits
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Friday, December 9, 2005


Posted by Steve Outing 4:42:36 PM
'OMG! Have You Seen What's On MySpace?!'
I watched Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.'s acquisition ($580 million) this fall of MySpace.com, the dominant teen-oriented personal webpage site (42 million users), with professional interest. It was a smart move for a traditional media company to make, in my view.

But lately I've been watching MySpace for a more personal reason. My teen-age daughter maintains a page (as do nearly all of her friends, it seems; the service is free for them), putting up photos and text, soliciting comments from her friends and commenting on their pages, listing favorite music and celebrities, chatting with her friends, etc.

Now, for the most part she's been reasonable with the content added -- though in a couple instances her mother or I have mandated edits to her page. Apparently, some of her friends are posting to MySpace unsupervised; I suspect that their parents are clueless to the kids' MySpace activities. Perusing the MySpace pages of her circle of friends and fellow students, I've spotted plenty of profanity, suggestive sexy photographs (though none pornographic), and overall teen tastelessness. One male fellow student filled his page with photos of near-nude women and expressed his desire to participate in an orgy. (That kid is never dating my daughter!)

MySpace is fairly loose with what it will allow, obviously. The terms of agreement that users must sign prohibits nudity, violence, and offensive subject matter. But that leaves plenty of room for teens to post stuff to their pages that will concern parents and educators but titillate their peers.

I point this out not as a warning to parents (well, they should be paying attention), but to point out what a different world traditional media companies like News Corp. enter when they get into the social networking space. I hope more media companies move similarly. But it will take a new set of skills and ethical standards to operate here. This isn't your father's media.
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