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MySpace to axe 300 jobs

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Social-networking site MySpace said yesterday that it will cut 300 international positions and close at least four offices outside the US as it looks to cut costs and narrow its territory coverage.

The move comes a week after the company said it would cut nearly 30 percent of its US work force in a bid to become more efficient.

"As we conducted our review of the company, it was clear that internationally, just as in the US, MySpace's staffing had become too big and cumbersome to be sustainable in current market conditions," chief executive Owen Van Natta said in a statement. He rejoined the company in April.

The News Corp. division has been trying to trim its payroll, bringing its staffing level more in line with its more popular rival, Facebook. Recent data from tracking firm comScore shows Facebook has caught up with MySpace in monthly US visitors for the first time.

MySpace has had difficulty growing its user base, which stands at about 125 million worldwide. Meanwhile Facebook has said that its usage has doubled to more than 200 million in less than a year.

MySpace, initially strongest in the US, Britain and Australia, has in recent years embarked on an international expansion that involves opening offices and identifying partners to develop market-specific features tailored to local cultural habits.

Beverly Hills, Calif.-based MySpace plans to trim its international work force to about 150 employees from the current 450 employees and said it will have to consult on the plan with international workers in some countries.

The company says the restructuring applies to all of its international units and will leave London, Berlin and Sydney as its primary international hubs. Offices in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, France, India, Italy, Mexico, Russia, Sweden and Spain will all be looked at for potential reductions.

MySpace China and a joint venture in Japan will not be affected by the restructuring.

In the US, MySpace plans to cut approximately 420 employees, bringing the total number of US staff to 1,000, or about 1,150 worldwide after the international cuts. As of May, Facebook had about 850 employees worldwide, the vast majority in the US.