As you will know, I’ve been working with MySpace for a number of months on a number of initiatives to help them evolve into a far more open platform.
Following on from the launch of the developer platform and REST APIs, I’m really excited to announce that MySpace has joined the DataPortability Initiative. In addition MySpace has also announced it’s first implementation in this area, which will making it’s profile data available for those to consume on other websites. From the press release:
“MySpace … will be allowing users to dynamically share the content and data of their choosing including: (1) Publicly available basic profile information, (2) MySpace photos, (3) MySpaceTV videos, and (4) friend networks. Integration of the Data Availability project will roll to MySpace users and participating Websites in the coming weeks.”
MySpace’s full press release is on Alley Insider. DataPortability’s press release is here.
Whilst a number of high-profile launch partners have been announced (Yahoo!, eBay and Twitter), it’s worth point out that access to this project will be available to everyone who agrees to the T’s & C’s.
(UPDATE: A number of people are speculating that this is a biz-dev thing only for agreed partners and that it may not be using agreed standards, etc(eg here). I just want to be really clear: this is NOT A BIZ DEV DEAL, this is open to everyone. The launch partners are simple there to demonstrate the complete value at both ends and help MySpace test the implementation. And as mentioned in the press release, this is all using oAuth for authentication and will be working with DataPortability on standards.)
As a co-founder of the DataPortability Initiative I’m thrilled to be a part of this project and able to help guide it from the inside.
Caroline McCarthy of News.com has described this as “a huge deal” and of course I agree. In the media call she asked MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe whether Facebook would be able to participated and he responded:
“This project is open to any site out there that wants to work with us so we’re happy to work with Facebook if they want to join up with us on this project.”
This is not the same MySpace I took on as a client 6 months ago. Significant and exciting things are happening at MySpace and it’s great to be a part of it.
If you have comments or ideas and suggestions for things you want to see at MySpace, please let me know: bmetcalfe {at} myspace {dot} com
[…] * Ben’s take […]
Ben,
This is a great news. Will this feed between mySpace and partners back-end be bi-directional? Like that provided by Microsoft’s FeedSync. So, a partner can both GET and POST user’s social data from/to mySpace?
Thanks,
It is seriously exciting to see advances like this. Fantastic!
What I’m most interested in right now, as a non-MySpace user, is actually the OAuth implementation. Is *it* a two-way street? While MySpace now support OAuth for other sites?
And does the fact that Twitter is on the list mean it’s finally got its own OAuth implementation sorted? Or doesn’t that matter because it’s only one way?
[…] of their opensocial specs, along with their intentions to support “data availability” (Ben Metcalf, Christian Scholz, and VentureBeat). The major focus of this initiative is data sharing between […]
[…] this week both facebook and myspace, two major players in the social network game, announced plans by which data would be able to move […]
[…] en MySpace al sitio desde donde queramos acceder a los datos. Esto, aseguran desde MySpace (Ben Metcalfe) es sólo el comienzo y no se plantea como algo sólo para Twitter, Yahoo y eBay, sino abierto a […]
you are a really good writer
Hello, you used to write excellent, but the last few posts have been kinda boring? I miss your great writings. Past several posts are just a little bit out of track! come on!
I genuinely enjoy examining on this site, it contains good content. “One should die proudly when it is no longer possible to live proudly.” by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche.