NEWSWEEK COVER: Next Frontiers - Putting The 'We' in Web

From MySpace to Flickr And YouTube, Social-Network Sites Are Leading a New Tech Boom; User-Generated Movement Called 'Web 2.0' or 'Live' Web

NEWSWEEK COVER: Next Frontiers - Putting The 'We' in Web

NEW YORK, March 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Fledgling companies MySpace.com and Flickr are leading a charge of innovators making hay out of the Internet's ability to empower citizens and enrich those who help with the empowerment. In the April 3 Newsweek cover story, "Putting The 'We' in Web," (on newsstands Monday, March 27), Senior Editor Steven Levy and Silicon Valley Correspondent Brad Stone examine how user-generated Web sites are rocking the Internet and leading the next tech boom.

MySpace is the prime hangout of 65 million (mostly young) people and thousands of rock bands, movie stars and marketers begging for their attention. Flickr built a 2.5 million-member community solely around a passion for sharing photos. The generic term for this user-generated movement, especially among the hundreds of new companies jamming the waiting rooms of venture-capital offices, is Web 2.0, but that's misleading-some supposedly Web 1.0 companies like eBay and Google have been clueful about this all along. A more fitting description comes from Mary Hodder, the CEO of a social-video- sharing start-up called Dabble. "This is the live web," she tells Newsweek. The cover story is the latest installment in Newsweek's "Next Frontiers" series about how technology is changing the way we live.

Levy and Stone look at the Living Web and where it will go from here. MySpace has spawned a growing list of imitators. Fastest rising is Facebook, created by Harvard sophomore (now dropout) Mark Zuckerberg, who began the site as a casual way to help his Harvard classmates keep in touch. Now Facebook has 7 million users at 2,000 schools blogging to each other, connecting friends and posting pictures of last night's party. Zuckerberg, 21, hopes that MySpace kids will graduate to his site. Other companies plan to circle around MySpace like pilot fish. "Our goal is to build instant messaging for power users of other social media," says Dalton Caldwell, the 27-year-old cofounder of iMeem. Even headier competition lies ahead. Google CEO Eric Schmidt says that he doesn't understand why people think his company wants to be the next Microsoft. "Everybody thinks we're building operating systems, PCs and browsers. They clearly don't get it," he says. So where does Google want to go? "Look at MySpace," he says cryptically. "Very interesting."

Flickr was a good business, too, as many users chose to pay the $25-a-year fee for unlimited photo storage and relief from advertising on the site. But that's not why Yahoo bought it for an estimated $35 million. "With less than 10 people on the payroll, they had millions of users generating content, millions of users organizing that content for them, tens of thousands of users distributing that across the Internet, and thousands of people not on the payroll actually building the thing," says Yahoo exec Bradley Horowitz. "That's a neat trick. If we could do that same thing with Yahoo, and take our half-billion user base and achieve the same kind of effect, we knew we were on to something."

As Newsweek reports, less than a decade ago, when we were first getting used to the idea of an Internet, people described the act of going online as venturing into some foreign realm called cyberspace. But that metaphor no longer applies. MySpace, Flickr and all the other newcomers aren't places to go, but things to do, ways to express yourself, means to connect with others and extend your own horizons. Cyberspace was somewhere else. The Web is where we live.

Read cover story at http://www.newsweek.com/. Click "Pressroom" for news releases.)

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