Comments on: Facebook, MySpace: A race/class divide?
Danah Boyd, a Harvard fellow, suggests in a speech titled "The Not-So-Hidden Politics of Class Online" that the migration of teens from MySpace to Facebook is not unlike white flight.
Danah Boyd, a Harvard fellow, suggests in a speech titled "The Not-So-Hidden Politics of Class Online" that the migration of teens from MySpace to Facebook is not unlike white flight.
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Oh, and I'm white, educated with a college degree.
Overall, I feel it's a preference.
it couldnt just be that people moved to facebook because myspace's html was spiraling out of control, making a very unusable environment. because really thats the only difference. facebook offers a clean, standard and easier to setup design, and myspace still lets it user tinker with HTML and have actual control of the content of their pages. i have a facebook, literally because everyone else is doing it, but i prefer myspace because i can tinker with the code and make my page look and act th way i want.
I think the exodus from myspace is a result of people not having the time or patience to understand that they have control over how their pages behave, and facebook offers a cleaner and supposedly more private interface.
Honestly, myspace has always been the ghetto of the internet, i dare anyone to say otherwise. but that all rest in the users. Facebook doesnt have a "ghetto" mode because its users dont have control over anything. d rather hang in the ghetto and have some freedom then go the the gated community where i cant even put a sign on my lawn.
There really could be something to this researcher's results.. but I highly distrust the assumptions made as to what led to that result. This is about communication styles, and yes education could have something to do with how people communicate more effectively with each other, and with who they desire to communicate; it is not however akin to 'white flight' in any way other than people who socialize with certain behaviors migrate toward each other (which is nothing new and did not show up with computers and the internet).
may, unfortunately, sometimes be a racial component to this-but not necessarily a racist component.
That doesn't mean one way is bad... it's just noting that there is a difference, and the control aspect may explain why.
If you go to a club, and you don't like the music you get up and leave. It's about choice. You go where you fit in. If that's where you fit in--that's where you will be.
A lot of myspace users just copy the codes from a certain myspace design site, paste them into myspace, create a bunch of trashy flashy pages, and think they are "creative", "unique" or "expressive"."
I like what this person said, even though the name won't show up for some reason... I made an account just to "like" it. Also, I noticed that when I was creating the account you could either use an e-mail or link it to a FaceBook account, not a MySpace. Yahoo also supports FaceBook, PlayStation Network supports FaceBook. My statement:
MySpace is dead and if you want customization, get a free web host and it's the same thing.
You get:
-Your own URL (not domain name, URL, there's a difference)
-More customization that MySpace will give you, with a free web host you can use JavaScript, MySpace won't let you do that.
-More space
-More than just one page.
And now refering back to the comment I reposted because it's just sooo awesome.
What teenagers don't realize is that when they pick that awesome looking Element, Monster, Nike, Adidas, or whatever name brand CSS/HTML block of code, it likely wasn't made by that company or some awesome looking dude. It was made by a computer/code geek like myself who just thought it'd be cool if THEY were creative... which it is. But as the comment above says: the person who simply coppied the code thinks that they're cool, creative, unique, and expressive. Whatever those words have turned into...
I also liked the comment that mentioned there may be a division between MySpace and FaceBook because of a _racial_ factor, but not a _racist_ factor
Lastly, TerminalBlue posted a comment, and towards the end he mentions the freedom of MySpace may be worth more than the "status" FaceBook offers.
But MySpace is still dead, as dead as Nintendo LOL... because the Wii sucks... and PS3 rocks... notice how I just insulted an entire country but put-up another, yet both of those countries are Asian? (Sony makes PS3, Sony is made in China, Nintendo makes Wii and Nintendo is made by Japan)
Myspace now is basically a convenience for bands and/or musically related endeavors. If that stick to and market that, i think it will continue to be around for some time...
ti99_forever: Yes, all those FB apps are very annoying--I logged on my FB account today to discover I hadn't done that for 6 months. And there's a lot going on with MySpace that's way too confusing for my aging brain. But I use both, for different reasons.
Point being that the internet has evolved as it developed to where it is simply a part of our everyday life. It hasn't really changed what we do, it has only changed how we go about doing it. People in China still aren't able to freely exchange ideas (remember that prediction?) Some people have always been crude and ignorant. The only difference now is that they can show the world--and do it anonymously.
Change comes from within.
Yes, MySpace was getting irritating with the scripts and general aesthetics abuse. And yes, Facebook has a more standardized UI and is, dare I say it, less "blingy".
But THE differentiating characteristic at the inception of Facebook, as an alternative to MySpace was... drumroll... A COLLEGE EMAIL ADDRESS. Without a ".edu" address from an accredited institution, you couldn't open a Facebook account. The site was launched in '04. This was the case until Sept/Oct '06. So who was already using Facebook when it opened up? And who was using MySpace? And in what economic classes would one be statistically more likely to find people with friends already on Facebook with whom to communicate at that point?
Not hard to figure out. Facebook's original user base was built around exclusionary criteria. 'nough said.
It could very well be a failed business model on the part of MySpace. I have an MS account. I choose FB for a few reasons.
1. The obvious, over customized, over commercialized, "IN YOUR FACE" with no apparent rhyme or reason to MySpace. It's chaos.
2. MySpace has had ample time to recognize this problem and they haven't addressed it. It shows to me they aren't up on the latest and aren't listening to their user base. Facebook has made mistakes, but corrects them when their users speak up.
3. The constant bombardment of sexual explicit material on MySpace's site. They sell advertisements of half-naked and suggestive materials. Any child can go to the website and see this. Facebook does not allow this.
"So is there something wrong with people wanting to hang out with people they like and have something in common with? "
If what you?re alluding to are white people getting flack for only wanting to hang out with white people than I would say that there is something wrong with that. Choosing your friends based on race and not the content of their character prevents you from meeting people who make you grow and change. In college I could have roomed with a carbon copy of myself yet I chose a good friend who happened to disagree with on hot-button issues. Rather than let these differences scare me I embraced them and became better for it. Being brought out of your comfort zone is only negative if you let it be.
Additionally this desire to permit defacto segregation in society is one of the reasons race and class still cause unrest in America. Instead of actually meeting people of other races, many would rather sit comfortably with their friends and family and form ill-informed theories about people they never met. This is a problem worth studying and attempting to fix.
BTW, MySpace just LOOKS ugly enough to be a ghetto or run-down shanty town. Facebook, by comparison, looks like the suburbs. You might prefer one or the other, but the design echos the people it attracts, in a lot of ways.
So say you have a 30+ adult ready to sign up to a social network: do you choose the one your/your relative's/your friend's "well to do" college kids already have (or college kid who's now a med student, a lawyer, an MBA holder...)? or the one with... everyone else. And going back to my point on exclusivity - that's always a twinkling factor when one commits to any product with some hint of social standing on their mind. So once again, do you choose the network of the masses or the one that was once limited access only?
Clearly I don't think this is the only explanation for the race/class divide in social networking. I think there's a lot to be said about user interface aesthetics/design, age gap association (myspace=high school age, facebook=college age), etc. But once again, I think the original audiences of the two networks is a crucial element in this assessment.
The boring, less technologically abled types go to Facebook because it is easier. (and Bebo too)
All (most) of my friends agree on this.
Myspace was and still is used to prey on the innocent less technologically abled people to steal their accounts thanks to Myspace and their terrible filters and that (eventual) horrible thing to hide links.
Facebook was pretty much static, but had thousands of those stupid Application things you can add into your profile.
The last point for Facebook was why i actually deleted my profile because Profiles were a mess of these applications.
Myspace default theme and homepage was god-awful to look at.
Facebook wins in this case, it was nicely designed. (besides the whole application thing above)
Facebook users smarter?
HAH! That's the best joke i have heard in a long time.
Ask half of them what HTML is and they'd probably google it. (i know this doesn't define intelligence, so don't)
Facebook was designed to cater more to those people whereas Myspace has progressively lowered the age requirements to access the site. (and language too)
Myspace is designed in such a convoluted way that it makes it hard to communicate in the ways you can in Facebook, especially when it comes to Networking (such as schools, colleges, etc, the forums are a mess)
Completely agreed with monicam-1 above.
HAH! That's the best joke i have heard in a long time.
Ask half of them what HTML is and they'd probably google it. (i know this doesn't define intelligence, so don't)
This is the dumbest quote I've seen. If you're a Doctor you probably don't know too much about HTML either. Probably don't care. What the hell does that prove?
- by xcopy July 10, 2009 5:59 AM PDT
- Oh Please.......Why bother creating a distinction between these two online "places"?
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- by Universal_Indie_Records July 10, 2009 6:50 AM PDT
- You're the one who doesn't get it. Through FB i've found 191 people that I grew up with and lost contact because we moved, raised a family, etc. This would not have been possible without the launch of such social networks without a lot of time and effort. I enjoy the interaction with people who knew me when I was "a kid" and seeing where everyone is in their life now.
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- by naterandrews July 10, 2009 11:25 AM PDT
- Your right! I use Facebook because I'm "cool", and I want EVERYONE to know it!
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- by blusky08 July 10, 2009 12:47 PM PDT
- There is no judgement here, just an observation. Like anything in life, a lot depends on how one uses these sites. My opinion, after using these sites and reading many studies/analyses concerning them, is that while there are some legitimate uses for social networking sites, the truth is that they mostly reflect our narcissistic culture. Contrary to the popular belief that these sites build human relationships, in many ways they create a false sense, simulating the feeling of genuine human relationships without having any true stake, responsibility, risk or investment in real human relationships.
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Showing 1 of 3 pages (69 Comments)The truth is that both Myspace and Facebook are for losers... The losers using these sites just don't get it yet; they're still too busy thinking they're "cool", while in reality they're just pathetic.
Loser? Far from from it... but what I've noticed that the world is full of jerks who feel the need to put down others because they don't agree with their choice of operating system, brand of phone, choice of website, etc.
I guess in some way it makes them feel superior?
So what about those that use these sites to share photos of events their friends and family missed? What about those that use Facebook to catch up with friends that are going to college? They must be losers too, huh?
While there isn't much that separates these two in terms of the service they are offering, it does a world of good for those that utilize it the right way. Instead of projecting your self-loathing onto others (probably because you either have no friends on either service, or because you dont understand how helpful both sites may be), try talking to people that use them before you pass judgement? Talk to those that got their start on MySpace Music and are no perusing their wish of entertaining others. Talk to businesses and groups that help to inform and help others on Facebook Groups. No, only an uninformed coward makes blatant statements like yours to hide behind while insulting others.