MySpace News: So Dumb It Just Might Work

April 20th, 2007

That’s just about the only compliment I can think of in regards to the recently-launched MySpace News. Web 2.0 features have been reduced to nothing more than “rate this story.” No comments, no bury, no drag and drop, just rating stuff. A Pligg site has more options, same for a NingDigg has nothing to fear (sorry, I just wanted to use Pligg, Ning, and Digg in one sentence).

The scary (or sad) thing is, it’s so brain numbingly reductive, any user could participate (even a chimpanzee), which might be the secret to mainstream success.

Still, there are several things that leave my head scratching.

The execution is so simplistic and story quality so scatter-shot, that it’s difficult to take it seriously as a news source. By going with this brain-dead functionality, a more successful attempt might be to brain-dead everything else — namely the content — and produce something more along the lines of Fark or Hot Or Not. How about focusing on bottom-barrel entertainment and gossip content? I could see something like that taking off much more easily with MySpace users than this “news” angle.

My cynical thought is this is an attempt to get MySpace users reading more news and therefore more of the content News Corp. (the parent company) produces. More on this subject at HipMojo.

Additional Reading: Wired News, Rex Dixon, franticindustries

4 Comments

  1. Eric Berlin says:

    Thanks Webomatica. The major pluses that MySpace News has are money and visibility and the leverage of its massive user base. So if they can make improvements, they *might* have a shot at making a go of it. But clearly this is a poor product launch.

  2. Eric Berlin says:

    Just realized that your name is Jason, so thanks Jason!

  3. Dave says:

    Unless I’m completely missing something, it seems like the only way to “submit” items is if your rss (or a given source’s) is included in the overall MySpace News aggregator.

    They certainly don’t make it easy or obvious for the audience to participate in any meaningful way (beyond rating).

    But who knows, maybe this will take off…somehow?

  4. webomatica says:

    Perhaps after culling through user behavior on MySpace, anything more complex than clicking on a rate me button was eliminated, or saved for later…