MySpace has launched a data-sharing project in which the social networking
site will open up its code to partner sites Photobucket, Twitter, eBay and
Yahoo.
The MySpace Data Availability Initiative will involve the creation of a new
section of the site which will manage the data sharing.
Users will access the system and share data on an 'opt-in' basis, meaning
that only information which the user has chosen to share will be viewable by
others.
The information will then be available for use on other sites, allowing users
to display MySpace profile information along with photos and video files on
other participating sites.
All user data will remain hosted on MySpace, allowing the information to be
updated as users change their profile information.
"The walls around the garden are coming down, and the implementation of Data
Availability injects a new layer of social activity and creates a more dynamic
internet," said Chris DeWolfe, chief executive and co-founder of MySpace.
The move is designed to complement
Yahoo's
open strategy initiative, in which the company offered to open its own
applications to outside developers. The two sites are also working together as
part of the
OpenSocial
project.
"Yahoo believes in an open internet that gives users the flexibility to make
their web experiences as relevant, social and personalised as they can," said
Ash Patel, executive vice president of platforms at Yahoo.
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