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  2. What Happened to Myspace (and Is It Even Still Around)? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/happened-myspace-even...

    Unlike Myspace, Facebook had a clean design, was easy to use and was free of crappy-looking ads that would crowd out all that beautiful blog poetry. Within a matter of months, Facebook took ...

  3. Samy (computer worm) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samy_(computer_worm)

    Samy (also known as JS.Spacehero) is a cross-site scripting worm that was designed to propagate across the social networking site MySpace by Samy Kamkar.Within just 20 hours [1] of its October 4, 2005 release, over one million users had run the payload [2] making Samy the fastest-spreading virus of all time.

  4. Myspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myspace

    Myspace (formerly stylized as MySpace; also myspace; and sometimes my␣, with an elongated open box symbol) is a social networking service based in the United States. Launched on August 1, 2003, it was the first social network to reach a global audience and had a significant influence on technology, pop culture and music. [ 2 ]

  5. Samy Kamkar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samy_Kamkar

    In 2005, Kamkar released the Samy worm, the first publicly released self-propagating cross-site scripting worm, onto MySpace. [10] The worm carried a payload that would display the string "but most of all, Samy is my hero" on a victim's profile and cause the victim to unknowingly send a friend request to Kamkar.

  6. Brad Greenspan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brad_Greenspan

    Brad Greenspan after five years of college earned a University of California Los Angeles Political Science undergraduate degree. During his junior year he earned a finders fee for matching electric automobile battery company Electrosource, Inc. with Liviakis Financial an investor relations firm helping the tiny publicly traded Austin, Texas based startup raise needed additional financing.

  7. StumbleUpon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StumbleUpon

    button that, when pushed, opened a semi-random website or video that matched the user's interests, similar to a random web search engine. [1] Users were able to filter results by type of content and were able to discuss such webpages via virtual communities and to rate such webpages via like buttons. StumbleUpon was shut down in June 2018.

  8. OpenSocial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenSocial

    The Myspace OpenSocial parser was released as project Negroni in January 2011 and provides a C#--based implementation of OpenSocial. Apache Rave is a lightweight and open-standards-based extensible platform for using, integrating, and hosting OpenSocial and W3C Widget-related features technologies, and services.

  9. Deep linking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_linking

    Web site owners who do not want search engines to deep link, or want them only to index specific pages can request so using the Robots Exclusion Standard (robots.txt file). People who favor deep linking often feel that content owners who do not provide a robots.txt file are implying by default that they do not object to deep linking either by ...