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The 2012 Olympics
in London are being touted by some as the world’s “first social Games.”
While some question just how social they’ll actually be, there’s no
doubt that networks such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube
will play an unprecedented role in how information is disseminated from
London, and how the global sports conversation is driven during July
and August.
Why the big shift? It’s simple: Four years is an eternity in Internet
time and since the last Summer Olympics in 2008, social media has
exploded.
Web use in general has grown rapidly, too. In 2008, there were about 1.5 billion Internet users globally, according to the International Telecommunications Union,
making up about 23% of the world’s total population. By this summer’s
games, that number will have swelled to about 2.3 billion users making
up about a third of the world’s total population.
Summer Olympics feature some of the most popular international sports
— including soccer, basketball, swimming, and track and field — so
that’s sure to fuel the global buzz as well. For more context on just
how and why social media will reshape this year’s Olympics in relation
to 2008, we thought it’d be interesting to take a quick look at a few of
the world’s most popular networks and how they compare then and now.
Facebook
2008: A tweet in August of 2008 from then-Facebook executive and eventual Path co-founder Dave Morin gleefully celebrated Facebook breaking the 100 million-user threshold. 2008 was also marked by reports around the web of Facebook — gasp! — passing MySpace in popularity. The social network debuted its now omnipresent chat feature that year as well.
Today: Facebook claims more than 900 million users, is fast becoming a portal to the web at large for many and is a publicly traded company. Its founder Mark Zuckerberg is a global celebrity.
Twitter
2008: 2008 saw explosive growth for Twitter, and it still finished the year with about 6 million registered users who sent about 300,000 tweets per day. The social network and its users were still very much finding their way, as evidenced by this official blog post explaining @replies. In 2009, Minnesota Timberwolves forward Kevin Love
would tweet that the team’s coach had been let go, breaking the story
and causing some in the sports world to speculate that maybe, just
maybe, the service could change how news was delivered and consumed.
Today: Twitter currently claims more than 500 million users who collectively send some 400 million tweets
each and every day. Sports news regularly breaks on the network, it’s
become a prime marketing channel for athletes and much of the London
2012 conversation among media and fans is sure to take place there.
YouTube
2008: By fall of 2008,
YouTube users were uploading 10 hours of video to the site per minute.
The site had emerged as the go-to destination for web video and had been
acquired by Google two years prior. It also launched its mobile site,
pre-roll ads and 720p HD option in 2008. But that success was nothing
compared to what the site would look like four years later.
Today: Iconic Olympic moments are sure to go viral
and become immortalized on YouTube seemingly as they happen this summer,
and it’s easy to see why. The company says it receives over 800 million unique visits per month. Those visitors watch more than 3 billion
hours of video per month and upload 72 hours of new video content per
minute. Five hundred years’ worth of YouTube video are watched on
Facebook every day and more than 700 YouTube videos get shared on
Twitter each minute.
What It All Means
Just looking at the the three most ubiquitous social networks reveals
a sporting scene and world at large that have been transformed by
social media since the last Summer Olympics. And that doesn’t take into
account services like Pinterest, Foursquare and Google+
— none of which even existed in 2008. This summer, expect news to
break, social sharing records to fall and moments to live on as never
possible before thanks to social media. And to think — this will all
pale in comparison to what 2016 has in store.
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