MindJolt, the gaming company led by MySpace co-founder Chris DeWolfe, recently announced that it’s changing its name to the Social Gaming Network. DeWolfe spoke to me earlier this week about the name change, and about his plans for the coming year.
The new company name may sound familiar, because MindJolt actually acquired SGN last year. (SGN founder Shervin Pishevar is now a managing director at Menlo Ventures.) DeWolfe says the SGN name is a better reflection of what the company is doing...Read Full Story
For a lot of people, Chris DeWolfe is still best known as the co-founder of pioneering social network Myspace — but even with that big name success under his belt, it’s fair to say he is not resting on his laurels just yet. For the past two years he has been heads down building an increasingly powerful social gaming company SGN, which was recently previously known as MindJolt, that is aiming to give Zynga a run for its money by making games that bridge Facebook, mobile and the web.
We talked...Read Full Story
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I sat down with MySpace CEO Chris DeWolfe at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland for a few minutes between sessions he was participating in. Travis Katz, GM of MySpace International, was also supposed to attend but was off skiing for the day.
DeWolfe talks about the two star hotel he’s staying at here in Davos (complete with a Murphy Bed), and compares the more somber mood of the event to the last time he attended two years ago...Read Full Story
Chris DeWolfe, co-founder of MySpace, is about to step down and leave the company. He will, however, stay with the company as a strategic advisor.
Tom Anderson will remain on board in a new role.
It looks like the new CEO will be Owen Van Natta, a former Facebook executive. It does seem as though at least a couple of other people are in the running.
Here are the official press release and the email that went out to employees:
Press Release:
Chris DeWolfe to Step Down as CEO of MySpace
Will...Read Full Story
Last year we reported that MySpace founder and former CEO Chris DeWolfe was raising a big round of capital to start acquiring companies. He’s now closed on that round of capital and has made his first acquisition. He’s also “got the band back together” by bringing on a slew of former MySpace executives to help him with the new ventures.
His company, called Platform G, has acquired MindJolt, a San Francisco based social gaming platform founded by Richard Fields. Austin Ventures is backing him...Read Full Story
Ion Racer is the latest title from SGN, which is a collection companies assembled by MySpace founder Chris DeWolfe. I recently met with DeWolfe, who shared his thoughts on social networking. While it propelled MySpace and music in the beginning (around 2008), DeWolfe had suspicions about where it was going. "What really came to mind," he said, "was gaming." Today, the App Store generates billions of dollars a year, and a big chunk of that...
Yahoo under Levinsohn seen shifting to content, advertisingEconomic Times... but was disadvantaged because he reported to News Corp's then-Chief Operating Officer Peter Chernin while MySpace founder Chris DeWolfe spoke directly to Murdoch, who became enamored with DeWolfe and his partner Tom Anderson, coming to see them as ...and more »
Beyond Facebook: A look at social network historyBusinessWeekLaunched in 2003 by entrepreneurs Chris DeWolfe and Tom Anderson, who was every MySpace user's first friend. It became a popular Internet destination and an important way for little-known musicians to market themselves and interact with their fans.and more »
Yahoo's new CEO Ross Levinsohn has mixed recordSan Francisco ChronicleThe deal forced Myspace to clutter its site with low-end banner ads that eventually alienated people, according to co-founder Chris DeWolfe. It "basically doubled the ads on our site," he told Bloomberg Businessweek last June.and more »
Murdoch has iron grip on empire despite pressureOutcome MagazineCEO Rupert Murdoch attends the Oxfam/MySpace Rock for Darfur event with his wife Wendi Deng and MySpace Co-founders Tom Anderson and Chris DeWolfe, October 12, 2006. By Oxfam America/flickr/sa-2.0 That is because Murdoch holds the reins of the New ...and more »
MySpace settles with FTC over privacy; sentenced to 20 years of regular ...Washington PostWe contacted former MySpace executives who were at the company during the period the FTC was concerned about; none had any comment on the situation. Copyright 2012, VentureBeat More technology news: Carrier IQ taking steps to rebuild its reputation ...and more »
Chris DeWolfe is the cofounder and CEO of MySpace, one of the fastest growing social networks in history and a cultural powerhouse among young audiences online. Chris DeWolfe agreed to stay at News Corp (the parent company of MySpace) for 2 years. But that original 2 year term will end this October.