
At the Merrill Lynch Media & Entertainment Conference in Pasadena, Calif., Tuesday, Chernin said that because most of YouTube’s traffic starts at MySpace, it may be time for the No. 1 social networking site to cut out the middle man.
Unfortunately this is not the first time that MySpace has attempted to do this. They've actually already once blocked YouTube and Revver, although they claimed their blocking of Revver was a mistake.

Digg's users' response to this are an accurate indicator of how the internet at large will react to this news (read: angry, amused, vowing to support YouTube). You'd have thought that they'd have learned their lesson by now...


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