08 Failed Social Networks That Never Made To The Top

Social Media Heritage
4 min readNov 24, 2021

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Social media is a platform where every user finds it entertaining and engaging to connect with their friends and audience. Not only this but there are networks where a user can share their views and know others’ perspectives too. We are aware of multiple social media sites like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, Reddit, Quora, etc. But, do you know, there are tons of social networks which never made it to the top and finally were banned, deleted, or removed from the world wide web.

So, let’s have a quick look at the top failed social media sites that never made it to the top:

DailyBooth:

Ryan Amos and Jon Wheatly founded DailyBooth on 13th February 2009, a day before valentines day. The medium was a photo-blogging website where users share their pictures along with a caption. When the website was launched, millions of celebrities and influencers signed up on the platform and made DailyBooth one of the most popular networks. Due to some issues, the site was taken over by Airbnb in April 2012 and became a memory by the year-end.

FriendFeed:

A group of Google employees formed FriendFeed to connect with people and build networks. It started in 2007 as a ‘social-aggregating website’ to focus on relevancy and usefulness. Later in 2009, Facebook took over FriendFeed for $15 million cash and $32.5 million in stock but took it down for some other reasons and was finally shut.

iTunes Ping:

08-failed-social-networks-that-never-made-to-the-top

iTunes Ping, from the name itself, we can understand that the founder of this platform is Apple and launched with one million users in 2010. Due to less perplexity, the platform was removed in 2012 and replaced with social media assimilation for Facebook and Twitter.

Google Wave & Google Buzz:

Google has multiple tools like Google Meet, Gmail, Google Drive, and similarly, Google Buzz and Google Wave also were attempts of Google, but could not be held any longer due to some conflicts. In 2010, Google Buzz replaced Google Wave, which got launched in 2009.

Meerkat:

Meerkat was a social media website that allowed users to broadcast live video streaming through mobile and smartphones. Ultimately, the website was taken down by the creators. Finally, Facebook & Instagram took over their position.

Friendster:

Before Facebook, one of the social networks took all the buzz, Friendster. It was launched in 2002 after dominating the Asian market. 90% of traffic on this medium came along from Asians. But in 2011, Friendster turned itself into a social gaming site with more than 115 million users, especially from the Philippines, Malaysia, and Singapore. But, after a three-year interval, it was officially closed down in 2018.

Yik Yak:

Yik Yak was one of the popular social networks which were quite a trend when it was launched in 2013. Basically, it was a discussion thread within a 5-mile radius and relaunched again in 2013 only for Ios users after a big failure. The reason was, the users posted anything they wanted anonymously, which led to bombing threats and hate-fueled acts of violence.

MySpace:

Even though MySpace is still working, it never made it to the top. MySpace is a social network site that enables members to make friends, write blog posts, add music, and customize their MySpace pages. MySpace went from the most visited website in the world in 2006 to losing 10 million unique users in just one month in 2011.

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Wrapping Up:

Social media is a platform where users from all around the globe love to spend time, and these were the top 08 failed social networks that everyone should know. Overall, we would always recommend following the social media websites which are safe and trending.

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