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Friendster

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Friendster, Inc.
Friendster Logo
Friendster Logo
File:Friendster Screenshot.jpg
Screenshot of friendster's main page
Type of site
Social network service
Available inmultilingual
Founded2002
Headquarters,
Key peopleFriendster Team
Revenue?
Employees?
URLhttp://www.friendster.com
AdvertisingGoogle AdSense
Registrationoptional
LaunchedMarch 22, 2002
Current statusactive

Friendster is an Internet social network service. The Friendster site was founded in Mountain View, California, United States by Jonathan Abrams and Jason B. Lindo in March 2002[1] and is privately owned. Friendster is based on the Circle of Friends and Web of Friends techniques for networking individuals in virtual communities and demonstrates the small world phenomenon. It currently has over 50 million users [2] and is mostly used in Asia[3][4].

History

Friendster was considered the top online social network service until around April 2004 when it was overtaken by MySpace in terms of page views, according to Nielsen Online. Friendster has also received competition from all-in-one sites such as Windows Live Spaces, Bebo, Yahoo! 360, and Facebook. Of late, newer websites like hi5 are posing new competition for Friendster.[5]

Google offered $30 million to buy Friendster in 2003, but was turned down.[6]

Friendster was funded by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and Benchmark Capital in October 2003 with a reported valuation of $53 million.

In April 2004, John Abrams was removed as Chief Executive Officer and Tim Koogle took over as interim CEO. Koogle previously served as President and CEO at Yahoo!. Koogle was replaced by Scott Sassa in June 2004. Sassa left in May 2005 and was replaced by Taek Kwon. Taek Kwon was succeeded by Kent Lindstrom, after a recapitalization by Kleiner and Benchmark that valued Friendster at less than one-twentieth its valuation in 2003.

Friendster's decision to remain private instead of selling to Google in 2003 is considered one of the biggest blunders of Silicon Valley, the Associated Press claims.

Patent

Based on a June 16, 2003 application, Friendster was awarded a patent in 2006 for a method and apparatus for calculating, displaying and acting upon relationships in a social network. Dubbed the Web of Friends because the method combines the Circle of Friends with the Web of Contacts, the system collects descriptive data about various individuals and allows those individuals to indicate other individuals with whom they have a personal relationship. The descriptive data and the relationship data are integrated and processed to reveal the series of social relationships connecting any two individuals within a social network. The pathways connecting any two individuals can be displayed. Further, the social network itself can be displayed to any number of degrees of separation. A user of the system can determine the optimal relationship path (i.e., contact pathway) to reach desired individuals. A communications tool allows individuals in the system to be introduced (or introduce themselves) and initiate direct communication.

Videos on Friendster

Friendster has a video page for the use of adding to their profile. The Video sources are YouTube, Crackle, Sharkle, and many other video sites except MySpace. This is due to the fact that MySpace is a rival community network of Friendster.

Other languages site

Friendster's Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and Bahasa(beta) site exists as part of its main friendster.com URL. A link in the upper right corner toggles you between English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Korean, Spanish, or Bahasa.[7]

References