iLike & Facebook
by fangjun 2007年5月28日 4:21Facebook users vote for iLike, but what happened to Audio?
By Eric Eldon 05.26.07

Here’s the early winner of Facebook’s open embrace of third-party applications, announced two days ago: iLike, a hot music service that lets you discover music that matches your tastes with others.
iLike’s users on Facebook have reached around 180,000 early this evening, from a mere 1,000 on Friday morning — that’s orders of magnitude larger than any other of the new Facebook applications (see full list here).
Let’s be clear. Facebook is in the news for a reason. Its open-door policy to other services — offering them a clear way to make money — is highly significant to the wider Web 2.0 community, and both a possible boon and risk for Facebook itself. Its 24 million young users give Web 2.0 companies a fertile playground for testing. Facebook offers a level playing field, which means that companies that gain traction — like iLike — are doing so not because of superior amounts of venture capital or scamming techniques, but because the community is voting for it (although it would be naive to say that clever marketing won’t happen from within Facebook). The risk for Facebook is in forgoing earning revenue from its own services.
So why iLike? There’s been a huge demand for music-focused socializing on Facebook (which isn’t surprising considering how central music is to MySpace users). iLike helps people find new music by learning what their friends are listening to; through Facebook’s platform, it allows users to add music to profiles and help them find their favorite concerts (and learn which friends are going to which concerts). iLike also offers free mp3’s that match users’ tastes. (VB’s earlier coverage here).
We should point out that the leading application also has an advantage because it tops the list of “favorites” at Facebook, and new users are likely to look closely at it — and so there’s a snowball effect.
However, in a fascinating twist on the music issue, another music app on Platform, called Audio, was No. 2 on Facebook with over 30,000 users when we checked this afternoon. It has since disappeared from the application directory. Created by a single developer, Numair Faraz, Audio allows users to search for and listen to tracks in the applications’ library of user-submitted music files. It lets them take tracks from Audio and add them to their Facebook profile page. Faraz told VentureBeat he was in the act of presenting the application to friends who work with major music labels when he discovered that it was gone. He called a Facebook Platform contact, who he says is investigating the matter.
link
TechCrunch: iLike: By Far the Most Popular Facebook Application