Tuesday, November 6, 2007

MySpace Gets Social With Google

Internet social networking leader MySpace is joining Google's platform for sharing applications across the Web – a concept that threatens to undermine the rapid growth of their common rival, Facebook.

Google trumpeted the MySpace coup Thursday in a meeting with reporters, two days after revealing its plans to create a distribution network for interactive applications known as 'widgets'.

The programs – created by a hodgepodge of independent software developers and other Web sites – make it easier to share music, pictures, video and other personal interests on social networking sites.

MySpace, owned by News Corp., was conspicuously absent from the initial list of Websites that agreed to host the widgets from Google's 'OpenSocial' platform.

That raised questions whether MySpace might try to build its own proprietary platform, much like Facebook has already done.

But MySpace and Google executives said they began discussing an open-ended system that culminated in OpenSocial more than a year ago. The formal announcement about the alliance was timed to coincide with a party that Google is throwing for software developers Thursday evening in Mountain View.

Google also disclosed for the first time that another popular social networking site, Bebo.com, will host widgets supplied from its platform, which is trying to create a common coding standard for the applications so they work on hundreds of Web sites.

Other previously disclosed participants networks include social networks Friendster, hi5, LinkedIn, Ning and the Google-owned Orkut.

All told, OpenSocial's potential audience is expected to exceed 200 million people.

But OpenSocial was an unimpressive alternative to Facebook's platform until MySpace confirmed its participation, said Gartner analyst Ray Valdes. "This is more likely to get developers' attention," he added.

Although Facebook has been growing faster, MySpace remains the Internet's biggest social network. In September, MySpace's US audience totaled 68 million compared with 30.6 million for Facebook.

Google's one-size-fits-all approach contrasts with Palo Alto-based Facebook's, which relies on unique coding that has prevented widgets developed for its sites from working at other places on the Web.

Facebook's formula has been highly effective so far, spawning more than 8,000 widgets in the five months since the platform started.

Including visitors from outside the United States, Facebook says it now has 50 million members and has doubled in size since May.

Facebook's booming membership encouraged Microsoft Corp. to pay $240 million for a 1.6 percent stake in Facebook last week – a deal that valued the 3-year-old startup at $15 billion.

Now, it looks like Google and MySpace are forming a tag team to duel Facebook and Microsoft. "This clarifies the battle lines, but it's not just a two-way conflict," Valdes said.

That's because other large Web sites like longtime Google rival Yahoo Inc., online auctioneer eBay and Internet retailer Amazon.com haven't picked a side yet. It's also possible that those Websites might introduce competing platforms for social networking widgets.

Because social networks are attracting so many users, they are emerging as potentially lucrative advertising channels. Google already has been placing text-based ad links on MySpace, just as Microsoft has been doing at Facebook. The partners share the ad revenue with each other.

Social networking widgets are expected to yield a myriad of other moneymaking opportunities, but for now Google has no plans to insert ads in its OpenSocial network.

MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe is confident that OpenSocial will transform his site into a hotbed of communal applications.

"OpenSocial will become the de facto standard for developing applications right out of the gate," DeWolfe said.

Facebook was invited to join OpenSocial, said Vic Gundotra, a vice president of engineering for Google, and Schmidt said the door remains open.

"Everyone is invited to join," Schmidt said. "There has been no effort to discriminate or exclude."

Facebook didn't get any notice about OpenSocial, according to company spokeswoman Brandee Barker.

"When we have had a chance to understand the technology, Facebook will evaluate participation relative to the benefits to its 50 million users and 100,000 platform developers," she said.

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