January 10, 2008 10:03 AM PST

Facebook tops one list of 'slow and inaccessible' social networks

On Thursday, Web site-monitoring firm WatchMouse released the results of a study about the performance of 104 social-media sites--social networks, blogging communities, bookmarking sites, and the like--and boldly deemed them to be overall "slow and inaccessible."

WatchMouse used its "Site Performance Index" (SPI) methodology to track the reliability and load time of the sites in question; this figure is computed by calculating the time needed to call up a site's home page and applying a penalty for each failed request. Lower is better: an SPI of 500 is considered good, whereas the Utrecht, Netherlands-based WatchMouse considers over 1,500 to be indicative of "a seriously negative user experience."

According to the study, social networks in general are not particularly reliable: 51 of the 104 sites surveyed came up with SPIs of 1,500 or more, and only six small social networks were awarded with SPIs under 500 (Faceparty, Tagged, ASmallWorld, Flirtomatic, Rummble, and StudiVZ). At the top of WatchMouse's blacklist was Facebook, which it assigned a whopping 6,629 SPI. That was the worst ranking out of any of the sites surveyed--even microblogging service Twitter, whose frequent downtime has become a punchline of sorts. (WatchMouse assigned an SPI of 1,467 to Twitter.)

Facebook has not yet issued a response to the study.

Many of the other poorly-performing social media sites aren't exactly household names, like Searchles (SPI 5,856) and RateItAll (SPI 3,370). Music-based social networks tended to come in with disconcerting indexes, perhaps because of the amount of streaming media hosted on many of them--Last.fm, acquired by CBS Interactive last year, had an SPI of 1,837; the fast-growing Buzznet was assigned an 1,868; and Mog had an index of 1,911.

But according to WatchMouse, many of the highest-profile social networks didn't perform all that badly. MySpace, which had a famous outage in the summer of 2006 when a heat wave crashed its servers, clocked in a rather respectable index of 923. Business network LinkedIn came in with a 1,006. The youth-oriented Bebo achieved a score of 912. And Google's Orkut, third-string in the U.S. but dominant in countries like Brazil and India, had an enviable index of 564.

WatchMouse is only one company, however, and every study's methodology has limitations--just look at the controversy over traffic monitoring statistics. The SPI is based on home page load time and reliability rather than individual pages on a social network--it's monitoring, for example, Myspace.com rather than Myspace.com/whinyemoband. Other performance monitoring firms would likely show different results on a similar study. We've contacted a few for comment.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 6 comments
MySpace is by far the worst
by r3tard January 10, 2008 10:54 AM PST
I would like to know how this test was done. Was it only the home page?

I'm a software developer. I can tell you, MySpace is by far the slowest and most inaccessible social networking site I've been one.

It is magnitudes times worse than Fakebook.

Magnitudes = my 'scientific' opinion ;0)
Reply to this comment
RealPlayer
by aka_tripleB January 10, 2008 11:08 AM PST
When I disabled the RealPlayer plug-in, it dramatically increased my overall surf speed and definately helped Facebook.
Reply to this comment
No way is Facebook as bad as MySpace...
by gsmiller88 January 10, 2008 12:40 PM PST
There is no possible way Facebook is 6 times more unreliable than
MySpace! I can't tell you how many error messages I have gotten
on MySpace.
Reply to this comment
Facebook BELOW myspace?
by timber2005 January 10, 2008 3:30 PM PST
That right there proves that the test is undeniably not accurate. Maybe it has to do with Facebook's AJAX usage but there is no way in all that it 0's and 1's that myspace came out near the top. I've SEEN errors on Myspace's frontpage... and maybe thats all the test ever got to load and since its just text, well its pretty darn reliable. Infact, seeing a error on myspace IS reliable in itself.
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Credibility of the source?
by Sallie Goetsch January 15, 2008 4:04 PM PST
It strikes me that "WatchMouse" is not a name to provide an aura of credibility to the suits who usually pay big bucks for market research. And it seems from the responses to this article that the users of these networks don't find their results very credible, either. Not to mention the fact that if you take a look at their complete list of sites, the best performers seem to be the least popular sites. Could they be loading faster because their servers don't have to cope with as much traffic?
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About The Social

CNET News' Caroline McCarthy is a downtown Manhattanite who believes that, despite popular opinion, the Web can actually help your social life. She's happily addicted to fun social-media tools from Twitter to Yelp to Facebook, sends an inordinate number of text messages, and has a tendency to waste time at the office reading restaurant blogs. Here, she explores all facets of the Web's gregarious side, as well as the unique tech culture in her home city of New York. (Don't call it Silicon Alley.)

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