Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Social networking sites ‘keep deleted photos’

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

: User photographs can still be found on many social networking sites including Facebook after people have deleted them, British researchers said Thursday.

The findings by a team from Cambridge University raise questions about the ability of users of the sites to permanently delete potentially embarrassing photographs.

The researchers posted photographs on 16 popular websites and noted the web addresses where the images were stored, before deleting them.

But researchers said that although the images appeared to have gone, they were still able to find them 30 days later on seven sites, including Facebook, by using the direct web addresses.

Special photo-sharing sites, such as Flickr and Google´s Picasa, fared better than Facebook and Microsoft´s Windows Live Spaces removed the photos instantly, the research found.

Joseph Bonneau, an American member of the research team, told AFP: “When you delete a photo, many of the sites don´t actively remove it, they basically just wait for it be overwritten.

“In theory, the photos could take months to disappear.

“It is possible to have them removed right away but it takes more work on their part so it is easier for them just to leave it.

“They have a responsibility to ensure users´ privacy and they are not fulfilling that responsibility.”

A spokesman for Facebook said that while photographs are deleted from the site immediately, they may continue to exist for a short time elsewhere.

“When a user deletes a photograph from Facebook it is removed from our servers immediately,” the spokesman told the BBC.

“However, URLs to photographs may continue to exist on the Content Delivery Network (CDN) after users delete them from Facebook, until they are overwritten.

“Overwriting usually happens after a short period of time.”

Facebook registers 200 million users

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Five years after it was founded in a Harvard dorm room, the online social networking site Facebook has registered its 200 millionth user, the site confirmed Thursday.

‘Growing rapidly to 200 million users is a really good start, but we’ve always known that in order for Facebook to help people represent everything that is happening in their world, everyone needs to have a voice,’ said Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

‘This is why we are working hard to build a service that everyone, everywhere can use, whether they are a person, a company, a president or an organization working for change.’

The company is considered to be the largest social networking site on the Internet, dwarfing the 130 million members affiliated with rival site MySpace.com.

Facebook says that 100 million users visit the site every day, and users have an average of 120 ‘friends’ on their networks. The service is available in 40 languages, with 70 percent of its users outside the US.

Facebook is also one of the largest privately-held companies active on the internet and has reportedly repeatedly rebuffed buyout offers from web giants like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft.

In 2007, Microsoft invested $240 million in the site in 2007 in return for a 1.6 percent equity stake in a deal that valued Facebook at approximately $15 billion.

Facebook changes mind on policy matter

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

A Facebook row, which occurred when

Facebook took control over users’ private information, has been resolved.

Facebook will now revert to old policy governing users’ personal data.

Consumers and civil liberty groups were intending to file a complaint against Facebook with the Federal Trade Commission over privacy issues when the Internet social site announced its back-down.

Originally Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg defended the changes, noting they were to reflect how users used the site.

He had said they were made to ensure that if a user deleted his or her account, any comments he or she had left on a friend’s Facebook page would not also disappear.

Tens of thousands of users voiced were furious at the changes

Vigilante groups rise up in wake of Australian flames

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

In Australia, vigilante Internet groups have been making threats against an alleged Victorian arsonist.

Brendan Sokaluk, accused of starting the fires in Victoria which killed 11 people, has been prematurely condemned as an arsonist on a Facebook site.

Facebook groups have been calling for the 39-year-old to be ‘burnt at the stake.

Sokaluk is facing charges of arson causing death, intentionally lighting a bushfire and one count of possessing child pornography.

Australian Council of Civil Liberties president Terry O’Gorman has spoken to ABC News in Australia about the Facebook pages and has said those responsible could face charges of being in contempt of court.

At this stage, no court determination has been made over Mr Sokaluk’s guilt or innocence.

Facebook creative genius leaves the firm

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Irish Sun

Monday 6th October, 2008  

Dustin Moskovitz, the college roommate who helped Mark Zuckerberg start Facebook, intends creating a new internet technology firm.

Moskovitz has said he will leave Facebook to start an Internet firm that engineers efficiencies for existing companies.

Mr Moskovitz, who helped Mr Zuckerberg start the social networking service in their Harvard University dormitory nearly five years ago, is taking Facebook engineer Justin Rosenstein with him on the new business adventure.

Moskovitz has said his new project will be a complementary extension of Facebook.

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Facebook named world's top social networking site

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

San Francisco:Facebook has overtaken MySpace to become the world's most popular social networking site with 132 million unique visitors in June, according to new figures from web tracking firm ComScore.The study also found that Facebook's visitor growth far outpaced that of MySpace, with Facebook visits up 153 percent on an annual basis, compared to just three per cent growth for MySpace.Other social networks showing strong global growth include Hi5 (100 per cent) Friendster (50 per cent), Orkut (41 per cent) and Bebo (32 per cent).Comscore said Facebook grew 38 percent in the US, where it had 49 million visitors in June.The strongest growth was in Latin America, where Facebook's visitors grew by 1055 percent. The number of European visitors tripled to 35 million a month, while growth in the Middle East and Africa was 400 percent. In the Asia Pacific region visitors increased 458 percent."Facebook has done an exceptional job of leveraging its brand internationally during the past year," ComScore executive Jack Flanagan said in a statement from the company."By increasing the site's relevance to local markets through local language interface translation, the site is now competing strongly or even capturing the lead in several markets where it had a relatively minor presence just a year ago.Comscore said the dizzying increases were helped by Facebook's tiny global presence prior to its recent initiative to translate the site into other languages.A year ago, it had only one million unique visits a month in all of Latin America, three million in the Middle East and Africa, and four million in all of Asia Pacific.Flanagan said international expansion was now the main target for the major social networking sites."While the social networking trend first took off in North America, it is beginning to reach a point of maturity in the region," Flanagan said.

Facebook users get more control over feed

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Facebook will tweak the user profile sometime tonight to let users fine tune the news items delivered to them on their home page. Currently users can filter news items to see top items, status updates, new photos and posted items from friends.With the changes, users can opt to see application-specific news items (events, movies, Causes, etc.) or just see all news items without any filtering at all. Specific friends or friend groups can also be selected.The importance of the news feed as a fresh content engine that brings users back over and over again each day isn’t lost on Facebook. They were the first major service to popularize the idea of a stream of news about a person, and haven’t been afraid to borrow good ideas along the way to make the product more compelling.Now if we could just get a RSS feed of all those streams out of Facebook, they’d cement themselves as the permanent hub of all that data.

'Scrabulous' pulled off Facebook in US, Canada

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

The creators of a Scrabble knockoff responsible for countless hours at the online hangout Facebook suspended their word game on Tuesday after being hit with a lawsuit, disappointing fans who logged on expecting to make their next moves.Hasbro Inc, the company that owns the North American rights to the word game, last week sued the brothers in Kolkata, who created the Scrabulous program.Separately, Hasbro asked Facebook to block the programme, something the site resisted despite risks of losing immunity protection from copyright lawsuits.In a statement, creators Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla said they agreed to block Scrabulous in the United States and Canada in deference to Facebook's concerns, while continuing to pursue their legal defense. Rajat Agarwalla, describing the measures as "unfortunate," declined further comment.Facebook said the Agarwalla brothers, not the company, made the decision.In the year since Facebook began letting outside developers write Web programmes that Facebook members can plug into their personal profile pages, Scrabulous has become one of the most popular applications, despite efforts by Scrabble's owners to end it.Earlier this month, video game maker Electronic Arts Inc released an official version for American and Canadian Facebook users under a licensing deal with Hasbro.After EA's release, Hasbro sued the Agarwalla brothers and their company in US District Court in New York, accusing them of violating Hasbro's copyright and trademarks. The lawsuit seeks an end to Scrabulous and unspecified damages.Facebook users who tried to access Scrabulous were simply told the game was disabled "until further notice," and many Facebook users updated their one-line status messages on the site to mourn the suspension.

Google steps into the lively, virtual world of 3D

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

New Delhi: Now you can be anyone or anything you want to be – online. With www.com, even Google is stepping into the world of 3D. And it may be the answer to your wildest dreams.Download a simple plugin and voila, it is virtual reality at your fingertips. You can even join a room and choose your virtual character. But how's this different from other virtual worlds like Second Life?Lively is accessed over your web browser, which means no large software downloads. And your personal room can be embedded into your own web page. It even works with Facebook and chat.Virtual Worlds Expert, Rahul Dutta says, "I hate it. It required way too much bandwdth to run properly and because it's a new application and it crashes often. But I see what Google's doing. They are trying to bring Web 3D or virtual reality into the mainstream.com and www.com all let you experience virtual reality. They both require you to download players but claim to work seamslessly with social networks. And since they have beeen around longer than Lively, the bugs are fewer and far between.

Facebook redesign to give users more control

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Facebook Inc. is making sweeping changes to the world’s largest social networking site, aiming to give users more control and to curb new forms of spam, company officials said late on Sunday.Facebook’s redesign aims to make user profiles more dynamic by giving more prominence to the newest information, and it is cracking down on applications that violate privacy or user-control guidelines."Users should have control of their information when and where they want," said Ben Ling, the head of Facebook’s platform product management. "Users should share things because they want to share them.Facebook will offer members a cleaner and simpler set of the Web pages which make up personal profiles.