MySpace CoFounder Says Purchase Was A Scam
Jonathan writes "Brad Greenspan says he's the real founder of MySpace, not Tom, and the sale of MySpace to News Corp. was a criminal act. In a nine-chapter report, he describes how this was accomplished by hiding the value of the site from Intermix Media's shareholders." From the article: "How was News Corp able to turn $327 million into $20 billion or more of value within a year? The Myspace/Intermix transaction was so low compared to other internet transactions that it is raising eyebrows by analysts and media everywhere. Everyone seems to be asking how News Corp. got such a good deal. It seems too good to be true! After signing the transaction to buy Myspace & Intermix (but prior to the closing), News Corp. itself even showed how strangely little it had paid for Myspace by immediately paying $3.99 per monthly page view for slow growing comparable IGN. News Corp. paid only .03 cents per monthly page view for the hyper fast growing Myspace. Therefore, we can conclude that the fair value of Myspace was 100x or more what News Corp. paid! "
Myspace will ultimately be worth nothing. Myspace is already past the height of its popularity, its just coasting on momentum which will run out eventually.
Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley
That's bizarre. Not all pageviews are equal. IGN's pageviews are people who are researching what games to buy, and are therefore prequalified for IGN's advertisers (and a large percentage *will* spend money in that area in the immedaite future).
MySpace's pageviews are teenagers who have little income, and who are not prequalified for any particular product or service, so advertising return rates (and therefore advertising revenue) will be dramatically lower.
I don't know about the "it was stolen from me" angle, but the pricing comparison to IGN is such incredibly fallacious reasoning that it really reduces the guy's credibility in my eyes.
-b
If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.