We're interviewing MySpace co-founder Tom Anderson at 3.30, and will be putting your questions to him for the Guardian Tech Weekly podcast.
Here's the list so far - though we might not be able to fit all these in!
Mike Coulter:
Greetings from Edinburgh. Maybe ask him what Web 2.0 sites he uses other than MySpace?
Deek Deekster:
Does he think there is a genuine class divide between MySpace (blue collar) and Facebook (college) and if so is that bad?
David Cushman:
Plurk for MySpace users, Twitter for Facebook users - discuss?
Ben Perreau:
Please drill him on music, how will it work? Will we really get 'all music' for free? How will it be paid for? Prerolls? Display?
ScottJones1978:
What's his favourite cheese?
Dave:
Ask him your last Elevator Pitch question - are you the next big thing?
Sarah Intellagirl:
I'd like to ask MySpace who they think their target demographic is for the future and how they'll adjust to keep it.
Paul Owen:
Why is their platform so awful?
Jonas Woost:
Would like to find out how they will work with independent labels.
Robin Wauters:
Where does he see the most growth internationally?
Alan Patrick:
What's the average CPM?
Alex Bellinger:
Ask him how important data portability will be to MySpace and its users in 12 months time?
Jonathan Hopkins:
Yahoo gets accused of trying to do everything (and failing). Why doesn't MySpace focus solely on music and only music?
Steve Lawson:
Are they ever planning on a complete site overhaul, to bring to back-end up to date?
Gaurav:
How do you plan to fight spam? Comments, friend requests and messages are mostly spam. Hardly an intimate place to communicate with friends.
Ciaran Norris:
When are they going to stop showing everyone as being in everyone's network because Tom is everyone's friend?
Ciaran Norris:
Are they comfortable that Google will be happy to keep paying for advertising it doesn't seem able to make a profit on?
Jessica Reed at Comment is Free:
Other social platforms have managed to attract old(er) people to their site. Is MS interested in addressing the issue and how?
Ciaran Norris:
Do they feel that the audience for networks has, in US/Europe at least, plataeuxed, & that it's all about deeper interaction now?
Andy:
Perhaps ask him why MySpace is so damn ugly?