Tag Archives | Facebook

Facebook Clears Things Up

Over at the official Facebook blog, they’re explaining some of last week’s changes–like the Web-wide “Like” button–and what, precisely, they involve. Facebook has an oft-stated company culture of being unafraid to change things, make mistakes, and then mop up afterwards–but wouldn’t everybody involved be happier if the company was a bit better at explaining things when they happen, rather then after users start to grouse?

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Where's Facebook?

Hey, Facebook is down right now–for me, at least, and for a lot of folks on Twitter. It may be imperfect, but generally speaking it feels like one of the most robustly reliable of the humongous online services…

(UPDATE: It’s back!)

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Verisign: 1.5 Million Facebook Accounts Up for Sale

Verisign’s iDefense Labs has discovered a website which lists some 1.5 million compromised Facebook accounts “for sale.” The selling price is $25 per 1,000 accounts with ten friends or less, and $45 per 1,000 for those accounts with more than ten friends.

While the accounts themselves do not contain enough personal information to commit outright identity theft, some social engineering could produce enough to possibly compromise more sensitive online services the account holder may use. Another avenue is the spreading of malware through the compromised user’s friend network, researchers said.

The information was found on a forum in Russian, posted by a hacker going by the handle “kirllos.” Based on the most current available number of users provided by Facebook — some 400 million — the accounts comprise about four tenths of a percent of the entire user base.

It may seem like a small number, however Facebook is not able to estimate how many more accounts may be compromised by other hackers, eWeek’s Brian Prince reports. Spokesperson Andrew Noyes did add that the social networking site is continuously monitoring for suspicious activity and taking action where neccessary.

When an account is compromised and detected by Facebook, the user’s account is suspended. That user must then take steps to confirm the account is secure, including changing the password.

Users should always be wary of adding friends who they do not know directly, and ensure that their privacy settings are set so that personal information is protected. I’ve already found this out the hard way, and have taken steps myself to prevent the possible misuse of my personal information.

I guess the best advice is to just double check that you haven’t let anything slip through the cracks, and stay away from the shady stuff on Facebook!

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Opting Out of the People-Centric Web

Here’s a good post on how to opt out of Facebook’s new Web-wide features. As it shows, if you try to shut off outside services’ access to your data, Facebook attempts to convince you you’re making a terrible mistake. It reminds me of Microsoft Bob’s impertinence circa 1995.

The Web–and tech in general–won’t be truly people-centric until software and services simply comply with our requests rather than second guessing them…

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Facebook Tries to Facebook-ize the Web (Plus: Technologizer Gets a Like Button)

“L’État,” Louis XIV famously said, “c’est moi.” I sometimes think that Facebook has a similar attitude about its relationship to the World Wide Web.

At its F8 conference in San Francisco on Tuesday, the dominant social network announced an array of new features designed to spread little bits of Facebook around the entire Internet. They include Google Friend Connect-like widgets for injecting social stuff like comments and activity feeds into any site; a new Like button that any site can add to any piece of content; and what Facebook says are much easier options for integrating other sites with Facebook than those offered by the existing Facebook Connect (a name which is going away). It’s also allowing third-party sites to hold onto data they receive from Facebook (previously, they were only allowed to cache it for a day).

The new features are already live in examples such as Microsoft’s Docs.com and an upgraded version of Pandora that plays music from artists you’ve liked on Facebook and lets you see what your friends are listening to. Facebook also says that its new pan-Internet Like button showed up a billion times in the first 24 hours after its launch.

Continue Reading →

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FriendFeed Is Not Going Anywhere, Says Co-Founder

VentureBeat’s Anthony Ha reports from the Facebook f8 developer conference that FriendFeed co-founder Bret Taylor is in attendance, and says that the site will not be shutting down. Facebook acquired the site in August of last year, and FriendFeed developers were re-tasked to responsibilities within Facebook. Taylor now works as Director of Product for the social networking giant.

Taylor confirmed that Facebook still has no plans to develop anything for the service, however as of yet it still remains alive and well. “For all two of you out there, thank you, FriendFeed users,” he joked.

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Microsoft Melds Office With Facebook

Facebook’s F8 developer conference kicked off today, so the Web is rife with Facebook-related news. One interesting tidbit: Microsoft is launching a beta version of something called Docs, which lets Facebook users collaborate on documents with their Facebook pals, in the browser or in the desktop versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. (The name “Docs” may prompt confusion with Google’s Office rival Google Docs, but Microsoft apparently owns Docs.com–and if I owned it, I’d want to use it for something like this, too.)

The beta as it’s been rolled out is semi-open: Anyone can view documents. But uploading, editing, and creating new ones requires an invite code. I’m don’t have full acess, so I can’t explore all of Docs’ features, but the idea doesn’t look so complicated: Basically, it’s a version of Office 2010’s workgroup features and Web-based apps that makes your Facebook friends your workgroup.

It’s tough to judge Docs until I get get full access to it, but it looks like it could be handy. One major question I still have: Even though this is clearly built on some of the Office 2010 Web technology, is it an entirely separate world–or can I create a document in an Office 2010 Web app and share it via Docs, and vice versa?

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Those Facebook Ads for Free iPads

Last month, I wrote about mysterious Facebook ads that offered free iPads to 45-year-old males. Or 26-year-old females. Or people of whatever age and gender happened to be those of the Facebook member reading the ad.

Now the New York Times has weighed in, with an entertaining and illuminating article on weird Facebook ads (including ones claiming to be aimed at Eddie Izzard fans). It says that Facebook doesn’t approve ads individually, but that ones that mention factors that really have nothing to do with the subject of the ad–such as age, sex, and feelings about Eddie Izzard in the case of a “free iPad” ad–are prohibited and will be deleted when they’re found.

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