Whatever Happened to MySpace?

In 2006 MySpace reportedly became America’s most-visited web site — passing both Google and Yahoo Mail.

So what happened? TribLive reports:
The co-founders, Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe, sold MySpace to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation for $580 million in 2005, and that company sold it to the online advertising company Specific Media and Justin Timberlake in 2011, which later became the ad tech firm Viant, according to SlashGear. Viant was bought by Time in 2016, which was acquired by Meredith Corporation at the end of 2017, according to The Guardian. Meredith then sold Myspace to Viant Technology LLC, which currently operates the platform, SlashGear said.
During its time under Timberlake, Myspace morphed from a social media platfrom and turned over a new leaf as a music discovery site, SlashGear reported. The once booming online atmosphere has turned into a ghost town, according to The Guardian. Despite the number of people on Myspace dwindling, a handful of devoted users remains.

The glory days of MySpace drew this bittersweet remembrance from TechRadar:
Not everyone on the TechRadar team looks back on those early MySpace years fondly, with our US editor in chief Lance Ulanoff recalling that it “it was like peoples’ brains had been turned inside out and whatever didn’t stick, dropped onto the page and was represented as a GIF”.

Many of us do, though, remember picking our Top 8s (the site’s weird ranking system for your friends) and decorating our MySpace pages with as many flashing lights as possible.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Neuralink Has Successfully Implanted a Second Brain Chip, Musk Says

Late Friday Elon Musk appeared on Lex Fridman’s podcast for a special eight-hour episode about Neuralink.

It’s already been viewed 1,702,036 times on YouTube — and resulted in this report from Reuters:

Neuralink has successfully implanted in a second patient its device designed to give paralyzed patients the ability to use digital devices by thinking alone, according to the startup’s owner Elon Musk… [Musk] gave few details about the second participant beyond saying the person had a spinal cord injury similar to the first patient, who was paralyzed in a diving accident.
Musk said 400 of the implant’s electrodes on the second patient’s brain are working. Neuralink on its website states that its implant uses 1,024 electrodes… Musk said he expects Neuralink to provide the implants to eight more patients this year as part of its clinical trials.

Neuralink’s device “has allowed the first patient to play video games, browse the internet, post on social media and move a cursor on his laptop,” according to the article:

The first patient, Noland Arbaugh, was also interviewed on the podcast, along with three Neuralink executives, who gave details about how the implant and the robot-led surgery work. Before Arbaugh received his implant in January, he used a computer by employing a stick in his mouth to tap the screen of a tablet device. Arbaugh said with the implant he now can merely think about what he wants to happen on the computer screen, and the device makes it happen… Arbaugh has improved on his previous world record for the speed at which he can control a cursor with thoughts alone “with only roughly 10, 15% of the electrodes working,” Musk said on the podcast.

Fridman said his interview with Musk was “the longest podcast I’ve ever done,” calling their conversation “fascinating, super technical, and wide-ranging… I loved every minute of it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.