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Thomas Anderson (born November 8, 1970) [1] is an American technology entrepreneur and co-founder of the social networking website Myspace, which he founded in 2003 with Chris DeWolfe. [2] He was later president of Myspace and a strategic adviser for the company. [3] [4] Anderson is popularly known as " Tom from Myspace ", " Myspace Tom " or " My friend, Tom " because he would automatically be ...
Samy (computer worm) Samy (also known as JS.Spacehero) is a cross-site scripting worm ( XSS worm) that was designed to propagate across the social networking site MySpace by Samy Kamkar. Within just 20 hours [1] of its October 4, 2005 release, over one million users had run the payload [2] making Samy the fastest-spreading virus of all time. [3]
Maxeen was an American three-piece rock band based in Long Beach, California, United States.. Signed to SideOneDummy Records in 2003, Maxeen released their debut eponymous album which was on an enhanced CD containing a photo slideshow with images by Leah Klinge and Jay Matsueda.
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Watch on. Then, in 2016, Specific Media was acquired by Time, Inc. Not long after, news broke that there was a huge hack that compromised over 400 million Myspace passwords. Time, Inc. was then ...
Williams's musical career began when he started recording a song named I´ll Swing My Fists together with Tom Denney formerly of A Day To Remember. Williams uploaded the song to his MySpace profile and started a solo musical project called '"Paddock Park". [2]
An aspect of Spacehey that differs it from modern social media, is the ability of users to fully customize the appearance and functionality of their profile pages using HTML and CSS, which was one of MySpace's most notable features. [21] [4] However, this also results in security problems as it did with MySpace; users can use HTML to integrate external content into their profiles that could ...
When I was at Uni, Myspace was a file-sharing service. It was widely used to distribute things like Simpsons episodes [and thus was very popular with students], but was presumably unprofitable. It was also one of the few file-sharing services back then that would work through a pretty draconian firewall, as it did its magic via HTTP. There's no mention of this in the article - would it be ...