News Corp sold Myspace on Wednesday for a fraction of its purchase price, bringing the curtain down on Rupert Murdoch’s tie-up with a one-time social networking star that ended up being eclipsed by Facebook.
Myspace, which was bought by News Corp in 2005 for US$580 million, was bought by Specific Media, a digital ad-targeting platform, which said financial terms were confidential.
The News Corp-owned technology blog All Things Digital put the purchase price at US$35 million, however, and said the deal includes slashing about half of Myspace’s staff of between 400 and 500 people.
“Myspace is a recognized leader that has pioneered the social media space,” Tim Vanderhook, chief executive of Irvine, California-based Specific Media said in a statement.
“The company has transformed the ways in which audiences discover, consume and engage with content online,” Vanderhook said. “We look forward to combining our platforms to drive the next generation of digital innovation.”
Vanderhook said News Corp would take a minority equity stake in Specific Media as part of the deal. According to All Things Digital, News Corp will retain a 5 to 10 percent stake in Myspace.
Myspace, which was launched in 2003, was the leading social networking site on the Internet when it was bought by News Corp six years ago, but it has been losing members to Facebook for years.
According to tracking firm comScore, Myspace had 21.8 million unique monthly US visitors in August 2005 to Facebook’s 8.3 million.
Facebook surpassed Myspace in the number of US visitors in May 2009 and has just kept adding users since then while Myspace’s membership eroded, according to comScore.
In May, Facebook had 157.2 million unique monthly US visitors compared with Myspace’s 34.9 million, comScore said. Facebook, which was launched in 2004, has about 700 million members worldwide.
Myspace chief executive Mike Jones, in a memo to company employees obtained by Silicon Valley technology blogs, said he would leave Myspace in two months after helping Specific Media with the transition.
“While I regret we won’t be working together at Myspace any longer, I am very proud of the work we have done here and believe we have performed with excellence — even under extremely difficult circumstances,” Jones said.
Myspace has gone through a series of layoffs, chief executives and makeovers in recent years as News Corp sought to cut losses at the site and reverse the decline in membership.
As its popularity waned, Myspace has been seeking to reinvent itself recently as a destination for music fans.
Lee Brenner, a former Myspace employee, said on Wednesday in a blog post that Myspace’s slide was probably the result of a number of factors.
“I’m sure most employees [former or current] will argue that it was poor management, or a need to hit revenue targets once News Corp took over, or a bottleneck in the technology department, or lack of resources given to their division, or a poor public relations effort, etc, that set the course of MySpace’s downfall,” Brenner said.
“It is most likely a combination of these factors, along with a ‘low-attention span’ public,” said Brenner, who was Myspace’s executive producer of political programming from 2007 to 2009.
News Corp formally put Myspace up for sale in January and was reportedly seeking US$100 million for the site.
Taiwanese suppliers to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC, 台積電) are expected to follow the contract chipmaker’s step to invest in the US, but their relocation may be seven to eight years away, Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said yesterday. When asked by opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Niu Hsu-ting (牛煦庭) in the legislature about growing concerns that TSMC’s huge investments in the US will prompt its suppliers to follow suit, Kuo said based on the chipmaker’s current limited production volume, it is unlikely to lead its supply chain to go there for now. “Unless TSMC completes its planned six
Intel Corp has named Tasha Chuang (莊蓓瑜) to lead Intel Taiwan in a bid to reinforce relations between the company and its Taiwanese partners. The appointment of Chuang as general manager for Intel Taiwan takes effect on Thursday, the firm said in a statement yesterday. Chuang is to lead her team in Taiwan to pursue product development and sales growth in an effort to reinforce the company’s ties with its partners and clients, Intel said. Chuang was previously in charge of managing Intel’s ties with leading Taiwanese PC brand Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), which included helping Asustek strengthen its global businesses, the company
Power supply and electronic components maker Delta Electronics Inc (台達電) yesterday said second-quarter revenue is expected to surpass the first quarter, which rose 30 percent year-on-year to NT$118.92 billion (US$3.71 billion). Revenue this quarter is likely to grow, as US clients have front-loaded orders ahead of US President Donald Trump’s planned tariffs on Taiwanese goods, Delta chairman Ping Cheng (鄭平) said at an earnings conference in Taipei, referring to the 90-day pause in tariff implementation Trump announced on April 9. While situations in the third and fourth quarters remain unclear, “We will not halt our long-term deployments and do not plan to
The New Taiwan dollar and Taiwanese stocks surged on signs that trade tensions between the world’s top two economies might start easing and as US tech earnings boosted the outlook of the nation’s semiconductor exports. The NT dollar strengthened as much as 3.8 percent versus the US dollar to 30.815, the biggest intraday gain since January 2011, closing at NT$31.064. The benchmark TAIEX jumped 2.73 percent to outperform the region’s equity gauges. Outlook for global trade improved after China said it is assessing possible trade talks with the US, providing a boost for the nation’s currency and shares. As the NT dollar