In sentences nobody expected to write in 2019:
there’s trouble on MySpace, which announced yesterday that it has lost 12 years’ worth of music and content in a botched server migration project. After a year of promising fixes, the veteran social network you had forgotten existed was forced to confirm that most of it now... doesn’t.
Philippines Latest News, Philippines Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Myspace just lost over 50 million songs by 14 million artists from its websiteOnce-popular social network was used by millions of bands and singers to share their music
Read more »
MySpace admits losing 12 years of musicThe social network has apologised for losing the data during a server migration.
Read more »
PewDiePie finally loses world's most popular YouTube channel to Indian music labelSubscribers to Indian music label passed the Swedish YouTuber – but PewDiePie fans hope to reverse the sub count once again
Read more »
Live updates as the world’s biggest websites hit by major outageEtsy, the US Postal Service and many more sites not working properly
Read more »
Myspace loses all content uploaded before 2016Faulty server migration blamed for mass deletion of songs, photos and video
Read more »
Myspace confirms losing every song uploaded between 2003-15This is the news that Myspace still exists, although not all of the 50 million songs that were uploaded there do anymore.
Read more »
MySpace admits deleting everything uploaded to the site between 2003 and 2015Social network blames 'server migration' for massive loss of past work
Read more »
MySpace lost over 50 million uploaded songs from a period of 12 yearsAny tracks uploaded between 2003 and 2015 have gone
Read more »
How MySpace deleted everything uploaded to its site between 2003 and 2015MySpace admits deleting everything uploaded to the site between 2003 and 2015
Read more »
Music, fashion and town planning: how nightclubs change the worldFrom architecture to drug policy, nightlife quietly incubates ideas that then flourish in the mainstream. But, with brands moving in, club-cultural innovation is under threat
Read more »