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Tag: Social Networking

Facebook Introduces @Mentions in Status Updates

posted by Rob Johnson on Sep.11, 2009, under Tech News

 

Facebook

One of Twitter’s strongest features is the @reply, where you can direct a message to someone else on Twitter by typing @ and then their username. Facebook, which is trying to emulate some of Twitter’s best features, doesn’t have anything similar in the News Feed. In short, it’s not easy to have a public conversation.

Very soon, that will no longer be the case. Facebook just introduced the ability to tag your friends in status updates. What makes this really interesting though is how you tag people: Using the @ symbol. Facebook has just turned on their own version of Twitter’s @Mentions feature that will be rolled out over the next few weeks.

Here is Facebook engineer Tom Occhino’s explanation of the new feature:

Now, when you are writing a status update and want to add a friend’s name to something you are posting, just include the “@” symbol beforehand. As you type the name of what you would like to reference, a drop-down menu will appear that allows you to choose from your list of friends and other connections, including groups, events, applications and Pages. Soon, you’ll be able to tag friends from applications as well. The “@” symbol will not be displayed in the published status update or post after you’ve added your tags.

Friends you tag in your status updates will receive a notification and a Wall post linking them to your post. They also will have the option to remove tags of themselves from your posts. We hope that tagging your status updates and others posts from the Publisher will enable you to share in a more meaningful and engaging way, and connect with even more people. We’re rolling this feature out over the course of the next few weeks, so you may not see the new feature just yet.

Summary: The @ symbol now works just like Twitter, and not just for users, but for groups and fan pages as well.

Facebook has just stepped deep into Twitter’s territory. How long until you can see your @reply history? We’re betting not very long at all.

via BREAKING: Facebook Introduces @Mentions in Status Updates.

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A Look At Facebook’s Reach Worldwide

posted by Robert Basil on Aug.28, 2009, under Tech News

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Facebook’s Reach Worldwide

Everyone knows that Facebook has become absolutely massive, but it’s easy to lose sight of just how big a number like 250 million is. Buzzpoint, a social media marketing firm based out of Los Angeles, has put together an impressive visualization that shows off just how large Facebook has grown. The company has estimated the current and past Facebook usage statistics using available data and plotted a number of graphs tracking its progress over the last three years.

Among the more interesting stats: as of July 15 2009, Facebook had 250 million active users, which would make it the fourth most popular country in the world. Facebook’s top two traffic contributors are the US (by a large margin) and the UK, but in third is Turkey, which didn’t even have a localized version until last year (though English is fairly common there).

via A Look At Facebook’s Reach Worldwide.

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Facebook ratchets up privacy controls (again)

posted by Robert Basil on Aug.27, 2009, under Tech News

A recent simplification of Facebook’s user privacy controls wasn’t enough for some policymakers.

facebookOn Thursday, in conjunction with the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, Facebook announced a new set of modifications to its user privacy controls as well as its developer API, and the targets of these changes are the thousands of third-party applications built on Facebook’s developer platform. That means there may be major implications for developers–some of whom rely almost exclusively on Facebook activity as a revenue source.

The Canadian Privacy Commissioner’s office released a set of recommendations for Facebook last month, specifically highlighting concerns that third-party applications could access a significant amount of users’ personal data. “It’s clear that privacy issues are top of mind for Facebook, and yet we found serious privacy gaps in the way the site operates,” commissioner Jennifer Stoddart said in a release at the time. (continue reading…)

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Twitter vs. Facebook: Who Will Win in Real-time Search?

posted by Robert Basil on Aug.16, 2009, under Tech News

Just over a year ago, Twitter acquired a small startup, Summize, a search engine for tweets. Once the deal was done, Twitter launched Twitter Search, and the real-time search revolution began.Because of that acquisition, real-time search has exploded. Twitter Search and trending topics have become a staple of the Twitterverse. It has also become one of the top tools for tracking major world events i.e. the #IranElection crisis.For the last year, Twitter has had no major rival in real-time search. But last week, that all changed when Facebook launched its real-time search engine. Not only can it search status updates, but it also tracks photos, notes, videos, and more. Can Facebook, with its larger userbase and recent talent acquisition, make Twitter Search irrelevant? Or does Twitter’s open platform and first-mover advantage give it the edge?

via Twitter vs. Facebook: Who Will Win in Real-time Search?.

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Is Facebook Past Its Prime?

posted by Rob Johnson on Jul.23, 2009, under Tech News

By Hillary Rhodes, for PC World

Nobody left to ‘friend’? Too many friends anyway? Why Facebook when you can Twitter? In the here-today-gone-tomorrow world of social media, these common complaints may mark the beginning of the end of Facebook’s enormous popularity.

Is Facebook on its last legs? Is it going to pull a MySpace on us? Will Facebook be the Internet’s hip site du jour one day, then suddenly lose the love and affection of most of its followers the next? We hope not. But various irritations associated with the site could contribute to its eventual demise.

In the first quarter of this year, the “bounce rate” — the percentage of visits to Facebook.com that consist of a single page view and then a quick exit — has grown by 19 percent, according to Internet traffic research firm Alexa. Though that statistic hardly qualifies as conclusive proof of Facebook’s imminent demise, it does raise the possibility that a large number of Facebookers are surfing over to the site, finding little there of interest, and promptly leaving.

Here are some reasons Facebook might be losing its grip on people’s online networking lives.

1. Facebook veterans are defecting to Twitter

People who delight in constant updates are the lifeblood of Facebook — but many of them are flocking to Twitter. When it comes to intense scrutiny of everyday trivialities, Twitter thoroughly out-Facebooks Facebook, where two or three status updates a day is the maximum before you start looking like a loser.

And even though you can update Facebook from your phone, Twitter feels more mobile. It gives the impression that you’re out and about, simultaneously doing something important and tweeting about it, whereas updating your Facebook page implies that you’re sitting by yourself at a computer with nothing better to do.

read the rest @ MSN Tech

 

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