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Online Member Communities Shaping the Internet & Society

Shane Pitman   on 07 February 2006 - 15:26 · 11 comments & 5069 views

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Internet media and market research firm Nielsen//NetRatings has released a report detailing the growth of online communities such as Friends Reunited, Blogger, MySpace, and many others. Over 57 million member community web pages are viewed per day totaling almost 1.8 billion viewed monthly by their members. In the UK alone over half of the online population participates in a member based online community site.
 
Alex Burmaster, European Internet Analyst at Nielsen//NetRatings says “Whilst most of the talk about the future of the web revolves around which of the giant media companies will win the battle to enable people to watch TV through the Internet, a revolution of more immediate substance is already underway. The popularity of social networking and community sites in the UK are growing day by day – particularly amongst the young who, after all, will be responsible for the future of the Internet. Sites such as MySpace, bebo and MSN Spaces dominate those most likely to be visited by the teenage market. The future of online to the young is about what the Internet is best at – communicating and interacting - not watching TV. The sheer volume in the way that people use these sites, whether it’s finding friends, family or sharing their experiences and lives with others, is connecting and bringing people together in a way that was unimaginable before the Internet. It has fundamentally shifted, perhaps even created, the way in which new micro-societies are being formed and relate to each other. It will be interesting to see how these affect the general construction of society in the years to come as the web increasingly underpins more of our daily lives.”
 
Boasting membership of over five million online and one million plus visitors per day, Faceparty is the number one community site in the UK totaling more pages viewed per person than Google, eBay, and the BBC combined.
 
Burmaster continues “Member communities are the most popular brands in the UK when you look at it in terms of the average number of web pages viewed per visitor. For example, if you consider that just the average Faceparty visitor views 23 pages within that site every day you can begin to comprehend how deeply ingrained the member community experience is in the lives of today’s online population.”
 
View: A Community Uprising
News source: Nielsen//NetRatings



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#1 tlogank on 07 Feb 2006 - 15:41
Actually, MySpace is probably bigger than almost every other friend network combined...
#2 fahad on 07 Feb 2006 - 16:07
facebook is extremely popular in the US
(6 replies) #3 Croquant on 07 Feb 2006 - 16:16
It's the evolution of wasted time.
#3.1 nookadum on 07 Feb 2006 - 17:06
Better to waste time doing stuff like this than doing nothing at all. :p
#3.2 markjensen on 07 Feb 2006 - 17:31
But it would be even better to read more books/literature, learn to rebuild lawnmower engines, study music and learn to play an instrument, donate time and work to a local charity, or a multitude of other things (both social and solo) than to create a bigger online presence.

These online 'friends' things seems a little pointless, in the long run.
#3.3 Joel Ogden on 07 Feb 2006 - 17:43
@markjensen... Agreed, culture is disappearing at an alarming rate.
#3.4 Timmah on 07 Feb 2006 - 18:42
Actually wouldn't rebuilding a lawnmower engine cause unwanted pollution?

Only dicing hairs, I agree. We all need to read more!
#3.5 markjensen on 07 Feb 2006 - 19:24
Well, a properly rebuilt lawnmower engine will run more efficiently, and burn less gas and oil than one in poor shape, so you might be helping to reduce pollution.

Maybe I should have used "rescue animals from suprtanker oil spills" as a better task... :shiftyninja:
#3.6 nookadum on 08 Feb 2006 - 02:44
Still, my point still stands. It's much better to do something instead of wasting time doing nothing, or at least, it's better doing something than doing something bad... or something.

And where the heck did rebuilding lawnmower engines come from?
#4 tlogank on 07 Feb 2006 - 19:06
@ markjensen - you can look at it as pointless, but I see it as a tool for developing and maintaining relationships easier with friends that I would not have kept in touch with. It is about networking...and I am sure many jobs, relationships, friendships, etc. have come about because of MySpace. So I don't think it is a waste of time, for some perhaps-but that is true with anything.
#5 Sens on 07 Feb 2006 - 20:37
I'm sure they class any kind of forum as an 'online friend network' so we're all contributing too.
And I for one happen to learn on my 'online friend networks' I've learnt pretty much everything I know about computers from here, and nearly everything I know about cars from streetfire.

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