Social Networking site MySpace is introducing tools for developing games, media-sharing features and other programs that better integrate with the Internet's leading social-networking site.
Similar to what rival Facebook did last year, which opens its platform to developers, a move that has proven to be a boon for music-sharing start-up iLike.com, photo-sharing service Slide and countless other companies. Those applications, in turn, have helped make Facebook even more popular, although it still ranks as the second most trafficked social network behind News Corp.'s MySpace.
MySpace will formally launch the MySpace Developer Platform next Tuesday with a kickoff event and workshop at its new San Francisco office. Although developers will have all the tools they need to create and test programs, they won't be able to integrate them right away. MySpace has yet to announce a start date for that.
The company said the program should result in innovations in how friends connect and communicate.
MySpace opens up more to developers










Posted by boddah at 2:58 PM 0 comments
Labels: social networking
2008 is coming.. is it the year of the worms?
Is 2008 the year of the worm? Of course it's not, but the latest buzz on the social networking scene is about a worm spreading on Orkut with the message "2008 vem ai… que ele comece mto bem para vc." This translates to "2008 is coming…I wish that it begins quite well for you".
For those who are not familiar with Orkut (and there's a lot of those), it's a social network owned by Google similar to MySpace and Facebook. Though it is not popular in the US, it's a big hit in Brazil (also India), in the same way that Friendster is like the national website of us pinoys here in the Philippines.
According to an alert from anti-virus specialist Trend Micro, infection starts when an Orkut user is sent an e-mail telling them that they have a new Scrapbook entry.. you know, wall posts? comments? testi(monials)?. Logging into Orkut, the victim is greeted with that Portuguese-language message above. Once a user becomes infected, the infected account downloads and executes an embedded Javascript that sends a copy of the original Scrapbook post to all the victim's contacts.
There are jokes saying that "Google has responded quickly. Too bad. If Google had let the worm rampage, maybe some American users might actually hear about Orkut for the first time."
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technorati tags: orkut, worm, google










Posted by boddah at 5:50 AM 0 comments
Labels: google, internet, online security, social networking