Myspace Train.
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Myspace Blogs, Blurbs, and multimedia.
Profiles have two standard "blurbs": "About Me" and "Who I'd Like to Meet" sections. Profiles also contain an "Interests" section and a "Details" section. However, fields in these sections will not be displayed if members do not fill them in. Profiles also contain a blog with standard fields for content, emotion, and media.
MySpace supports image uploads. One of the images can be chosen to be the "default image," the image that will be seen on the profile's main page, search page, and as the image that will appear to the side of the user's name on comments, messages, etc. Flash, such as on MySpace's video service, can be embedded. Also there is a "details" section which allows the user to provide personal information on the user such as his/her race, religion, and sexual orientation.
As of May 2, 2007, a very popular Myspace Group called "I Support" reported that the sexual orientation feature of Myspace had removed the option of "gay." While most rumors floating around My Space are false; doing a quick check reveals, in fact, "gay" has been removed from the options of sexual orientation. The only ones appearing are straight, lesbian, not sure, and no answer. Myspace statesthis was an error caused by a bug in the system.
A MySpace Friend.
An image signifies when a friend is online. The User's Friends Space contains a count of a user's friends, a "Top Friends" area, and a link to view all of the user's friends. Users can choose a certain number of friends to be displayed on their profile in the "Top Friends" area.
"Top Friends" used to be restricted to eight, commonly called the "Top 8". People bypassed this using third-party tools to emulate a "Top X" friends. Now, MySpace allows four, eight, twelve, sixteen, twenty, or twenty-four friends to be displayed in the "Top Friends" section.
Myspace Comments.
Below the User's Friends Space (by default) is the "comments" section, wherein the user's friends may leave comments for all viewers to read. MySpace users have the option to delete any comment and/or require all comments to be approved before posting.
If a user account is deleted, every comment left on other profiles by that user is deleted, and replaced with "This Profile No Longer Exists." Comments are the real engine behind MySpace. Many sites were developed to offer HTML comments like MySpace comments. These HTML comments are mainly links to images on other sites, and offer bandwidth in return for visitors.
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