MyspaceMySpace.com came into existence in the autumn of 2003 and it was seen as a less intense, music-oriented adaptation of friendster.com.  MySpaceMySpace rapidly became popular with teenagers and young adults in large numbers who considered it as an appropriate site to sustain their home pages, which they frequently embellished with flashy artwork, and personal snapshots. It also had  and bblogs containing candid and frequently bawdy description of their lives, all connected to the home pages of acquaintances.

Numerous individuals in their 20's who use MySpace find that MySpaceMySpace.com it possesses the traits of an online adaptation of a teenager's bedroom, a location where the walls are covered with posters and photographs. The music is noisy, and mature individuals find themselves as strange species.

Although a large number of individuals who are over 30 years old are not familiar with MySpaceMySpace.com, it boasts of about 27 million members.

The expansion of MySpaceMySpace - whichIt does not charge anything from users and gains revenue from banner ads emerging on top of each page. It  - is quite remarkable since in its essence it does n'ot present anything that is really innovative.

MySpaceMySpace.com is considered as a shared system. In organization, MySpaceMySpace is not exceptionally distinctive. The site is a medley of traits formerly developed by various sites. such as Friendster, Hot or Not, Xanga, Rate My Teacher, etc. At the centrecenter are profiles that are related by connections to friends on the network. Profiles are tailored to convey a person's preferences and liking, opinion of the day and principles. Music, photos and video assist users enhance their profile and make it more attractive.

MyspaceMySpace.com permits individuals to connect to their acquaintances and persons can navigate the system with the help of these profiles. A person's "Top 8" friends are exhibited on the first page of their profile and the remaining surface on a different page.