Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Facebook Messenger App for iPad Finally Available for Download


Facebook has finally made its dedicated Messenger application available for iPad users across the globe, letting users do away with utilising the enlarged iPhone app on the tablet.
The Facebook Messenger app for iPad comes with a multi-window feature that gives users a list of chats on the left-side of the screen, and the current active chat enlarged on the right side.
Some of the other features included in the Facebook Messenger app for iPad are chat stickers, easy group navigation and VoIP calling. However, the iPad Facebook Messenger app misses on some of the latest features introduced by Facebook on the mobile apps, like split-screen selfie camera or quick video recording feature by simple tap-and-hold gesture. These features were introduced for Androidand iPhone last month. We assume these features will arrive soon as an update.
Additionally, Techcrunch noted that if users have both Facebook and Messenger apps on their iPad, tapping on the messages section on the Facebook app will lead them to the Messenger app with the desired conversation open.

The Facebook Messenger app for iPad is available to download from the App Store, and is compatible with iPad tablets running iOS 7 or later versions.
In April, Facebook Messenger was reported to have surpassed the 200 million monthly active users mark, and its latest appearance on iPad tablets will bump up the numbers. With more number of Messenger users, Facebook seems to be trying hard to make its mark in thee instant messaging sector. The firm notably acquired WhatsApp messaging service in February and also introduced its own Snapchat-like Slingshot messaging app last month.
The Slingshot app allows users to sign up for the service with their mobile phone number and connect with friends in their phone's contact list or, if they want, by finding their Facebook friends.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Facebook Turns Into Mental Research Asylum As Half Million Users Forced To See Depressing Posts

There is a serious uproar & protests going on in the social media world after news came in that Facebook has conducted some secret psychological research on it’s users, without informing them. Termed as a‘disturbing emotional experiment’ users and social media experts are demanding apology and justification from world’s biggest social network.


What Happened?

Researchers from Cornell University and the University of California collaborated with Facebook and devised an psychological experiment wherein news feed of more than 6.5 lakh users were specially tweaked.
These users, who unwittingly became part of this experiment, were forced to see positive and negative posts based on the experiment.
Some of these users’ newsfeed on Facebook only showed positive posts and the rest of the user’s newsfeed only showed negative posts.
Termed as an ‘emotional experiment’, the scientists then recorded the response of these users based on the positive or negative newsfeed. After evaluating the results and responses, the study was published in the journal called “Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA”, and as per the published journal, “Emotions expressed by friends, via online social networks, influence our own moods, constituting, to our knowledge, the first experimental evidence for massive-scale emotional contagion via social networks.”
Hardly any surprises over here as the human mind will react and respond accordingly, based on the positive or negative news from their friends and family.

What is the fuss?

Privacy advocates, social media experts and lawyers are demanding to know that why Facebook conducted such an emotional and psychological experiment without informing 6 lakh+ users, and how far is this allowed as per the law.
At a time when Facebook has 1 billion+ users, with a wealth of private information about everyone, is it ethical to conduct such ‘social experiment’ on unaware users?
Politicians in UK have demanded a judicial enquiry into this experiment done by Facebook in manipulating user’s newsfeed as one of the parliamentary member quoted, “This is extraordinarily powerful stuff and if there is not already legislation on this, then there should be to protect people..”

Read more: http://trak.in/tags/business/2014/06/30/facebook-mental-research-depressing-posts/

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Facebook Bid to Shield Data From the Law Fails, So Far


Facebook and the Manhattan district attorney's office are in a bitter fight over the government's demand for the contents of hundreds of Facebook accounts.
In confidential legal documents unsealed Wednesday, Facebook argues that Manhattan prosecutors last summer violated the constitutional right of its users to be free of unreasonable searches by demanding nearly complete account data on 381 people, ranging from pages they had liked to photos and private messages.
When the social networking company fought the data demands, a New York judge ruled that Facebook had no standing to contest the search warrants since it was simply an online repository of data, not a target of the criminal investigation. To protect the secrecy of the investigation, the judge also barred the company from informing the affected users, a decision that also prevented the individuals from fighting the data requests themselves.
The case, which is on appeal, pits the Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches by the government against the needs of prosecutors to seek evidence from the digital sources where people increasingly store their most sensitive data.
The issue has risen repeatedly in court cases. Just before a Manhattan judge lifted the seal on the Facebook case, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a major decision on similar privacy issues, ruling 9-0 that cellphones are so vital to people's lives that the police must get a warrant to search them, just as they would need to do to search a person's home.
(Also Read: Facebook: New York Prosecutors Got Data on 381 Users)
"In that case, they were talking about how revealing the information could be on a cellphone. You could make a similar point about people's social media profiles," said Kurt Opsahl, deputy general counsel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit group that promote digital civil liberties.
Lawyers for Facebook, which has about 1.28 billion active users worldwide, said they were pressing the fight in the appellate courts because they were troubled both by the vast scope of the district attorney's search warrants and by the judge's ruling that Facebook could not challenge the warrants.
Prosecutors say the information gleaned from the accounts contributed to the highly publicized indictments in January and February of more than 130 police officers, firefighters and other civil servants on charges of defrauding the Social Security system with fake disability claims. Photos posted on Facebook showed supposedly disabled people riding personal watercraft, teaching karate, deep-sea fishing and pursuing other vigorous activities. Those photos supported other evidence, like wiretapped conversations, that prosecutors gathered in their three-year investigation.
"This was a massive scheme involving as many as 1,000 people who defrauded the federal government of more than $400 million in benefits," said Joan Vollero, a spokeswoman for the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr. "The defendants in this case repeatedly lied to the government about their mental, physical and social capabilities. Their Facebook accounts told a different story. A judge found there was probable cause to execute search warrants, and two courts have already found Facebook's claims without merit."
Orin S. Kerr, a law professor at George Washington University who is an expert on digital searches and seizures, said Facebook was trying to do something unusual in establishing a right for service providers to challenge a warrant. "The real question is, 'Can they challenge warrants for their customers?' And I think the answer is probably not, under current law," Kerr said.
Facebook lawyers say they are continuing to press the fight because they are troubled both by the vast scope of the district attorney's search warrants and by the judge's ruling that the company had no legal standing to contest the warrants on behalf of the affected users.
Chris Sonderby, deputy general counsel for Facebook, said that if Facebook could not challenge the warrants and the users remained in the dark, no one would ever get the chance to object to the possible invasion of privacy.
"It appeared to us from the outset that there would be a large number of people who were never charged in this case," said Chris Sonderby, deputy general counsel for Facebook. "The district attorney's response was that those people would have their day in court. There are more than 300 people that will never have that chance."
Sonderby said the district attorney's demand for data was far larger than anything it had ever received from any other prosecutor. And Vance's office was unwilling to discuss narrowing the scope of its requests to be more directly relevant to its investigation.
The relationship was so chilly, Sonderby said, that when Facebook pressed its challenge to the warrants, one of the prosecutors called and threatened to press criminal contempt of court charges against the company and throw its officials in jail.
Read more: http://gadgets.ndtv.com/social-networking/news/facebook-bid-to-shield-data-from-the-law-fails-so-far-549545

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

2 million Facebook, Gmail and Twitter passwords stolen in massive hack

Hackers have stolen usernames and passwords for nearly two million accounts at Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo and others, according to a report released this week.

Trustwave said. The virus was capturing log-in credentials for key websites over the past month and sending those usernames and passwords to a server controlled by the hackers.
2 million passwords have been stolen, compromising accounts at Facebook, Gmail, Twitter, Yahoo and ADP.
The massive data breach was a result of keylogging software maliciously installed on an untold number of computers around the world, researchers at cybersecurity firm
On Nov. 24, Trustwave researchers tracked that server, located in the Netherlands. They discovered compromised credentials for more than 93,000 websites, including:
Trustwave notified these companies of the breach. They posted their findings publicly on Tuesday.
"We don't have evidence they logged into these accounts, but they probably did," said John Miller, a security research manager at Trustwave.
ADP, Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter told CNNMoney they have notified and reset passwords for compromised users. Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) declined to comment. Yahoo did not provide immediate responses.
Miller said the team doesn't yet know how the virus got onto so many personal computers. The hackers set up the keylogging software to rout information through a proxy server, so it's impossible to track down which computers are infected.
Among the compromised data are 41,000 credentials used to connect to File Transfer Protocol (FTP, the standard network used when transferring big files) and 6,000 remote log-ins.
The hacking campaign started secretly collecting passwords on Oct. 21, and it might be ongoing: Although Trustwave discovered the Netherlands proxy server, Miller said there are several other similar servers they haven't yet tracked down.
Related: Adobe's abysmal security record
Want to know whether your computer is infected? Just searching programs and files won't be enough, because the virus running in the background is hidden, Miller said. Your best bet is to update your antivirus software and download the latest patches for Internet browsers, Adobe (ADBE) and Java.
Of all the compromised services, Miller said he is most concerned with ADP. Those log-ins are typically used by payroll personnel who manage workers' paychecks. Any information they see could be viewed by hackers until passwords are reset.
"They might be able to cut checks, modify people's payments," Miller speculated.
But in a statement, ADP said that, "To [its] knowledge, none of ADP's clients has been adversely affected by the compromised credentials." To top of page

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Facebook unveils home, but do not call it "Facebook Phone"

No terminal weblog Facebook. Confirmed the rumors of the last few hours.Only a launcher for Android and a modest HTC smartphones. 

Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Facebook during the presentation of the Home
In the end it went as it should go. None if it is taken too much though maybe you could hope for something more. Zuckerberg at the bottom was always clear on the subject: "no plan For That" .There is not and there will be no Facebook Phone .No direct competitor of the iPhone 5 or the Galaxy S4 or any other smartphone on the market.Nothing. Nothing like this weblog Facebook.
During the presentation, which ended recently Mark has revealed nothing more than a family of applications for Android devices. A screen calledHome with a whole host of features that put the user at the center of the smartphone. In practice, what in jargon is called "launcher" . Capiamoci.The trick only applies to Android. Why iOS imagine if you can do as you please.
Coming Home , the paradigm of classic screen applications has been turned upside down. The user first. The "App" in some way, are hidden, relegated to a secondary role. As if to say, we know that two hundred apps downloaded on average, with regularity, if you use three or four. And Facebook makes it to grand master.
The aim of the move is just one. Keep as much as possible so users will not glued to your smartphone as Facebook. Not enough notifications. We need a steady and continuous flow of information that it maintains active connections with our friends on the social network seamlessly. The trivial, the more hours spent on social networks by users mean more ability to attract advertising investment.
A curiosity. While presenting Home , Zuckerberg was sweating like a kangaroo in the middle of the desert. I wonder if he was wondering how we would have taken us, after rumors stellar in recent days. In the end it could be worse. And let's face it all, it was not bad. Wall Street reacted almost with indifference to today's announcement. It has neither rewarded nor punished Facebook. Trade on the Nasdaq in these minutes scored a weak 0.78%.

I forgot. Towards the end he made ​​an appearance on stage lightning Peter Chou , CEO of HTC. He was holding the HTC first, the first Android smartphone that will mount the native interface "Home" on Facebook. He talked about yes and no for thirty seconds. It did not seem much pleased.Maybe he was wondering what he was doing there and if that terminal then there was such a great need. For Home Instead, there remains only the curiosity to try it. Just an Android device of the newer ones and wait for April 14.
Post By: Chhoy Dany

The political ambitions of Zuckerberg: "we are rich and we check the information channels of mass"

Mark Zuckerberg and other big Silicon Valley play the political card. With a first slip.

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, with the President of the United States.
There is a confidential document ended up in the hands of the newspaper Politico that at this time is doing a lot to discuss its language considered arrogant and presumptuous. What is reported in the text casts a shadow on the political ambitions of Mark Zuckerberg and many of his fellow fortune.
For the whole history we must go back a few weeks ago when Mark Zuckerberg presented the project of a political group made ​​up of many characters of the hi-tech Silicon Valley. Among the subscribers includeJack Dorsey (founder of Twitter), Reid Hoffman (co-founder of Linkedin), Reed Hastings (Netflix founder), Kevin Systrom (Instagram founder) and Mark Pincus (founder of Zynga).
In a section titled "Our Assets" lists the three main reasons why people like them are a "power politics" of the USA. The text reads:
"1. We have full control of the channels of mass media, both as a company and as individuals, 2. Our voice has a huge weight because they are very popular among Americans, 3. In our group there are people with a lot of money. If all this is used correctly it can have a huge influence. "
A few days ago Jack Dorsey had expressed his political interests even presenting itself as a possible candidate for mayor of New York.
The group should work according to rumors, later denied by the name of "Human Capital" has the purpose of representing the vision and interests dell'industri hi-tech on the American political scene. The first objective is to support immigration reform to ensure arrival in the United States for people with high potential thus making the U.S. a pool of technological expertise unmatched in the world.

Given what has just transpired somehow doubt that, beyond the good intentions, there's more naturally.

Facebook announces results for the first quarter of 2013: "Let us not lose users, but ..."


Dave Morin, founder of Path
Dave Morin, founder of Path

Facebook users do not lose. In the first quarter of 2013 increased by 26% on an annual basis. And mobile users have increased by 54%.

The cheerful chorus that Facebook is losing users cyclically returns to the forefront of news coverage. When you have no more to talk about a subject is always able to pull out a little 'traffic. It seems as if you are exposed to imagine the dear Zuckerberg suffering. Last week, the usual rumors that had circulated in Menlo Park if they were seeing the ugly. According to Neilsen, over the past 12 months, only in the U.S., Facebook had lost 10 million users. In March 2013, active users to 142 million Americans would be dropped. The denial came directly from Facebook yesterday announced its results for the first quarter of 2013 .
In March, active users Americans were 194 million . Daily active users were 665 million an increase of 26% compared to the same period of 2012. The monthly active users reached € 1.11 billion , an increase of23% over last year. Mobile users in March were 751 million , an increase of 54% on an annual basis.
Here in Italy the news of the stampede of users from the most popular social network was relaunched on almost all the papers. More than anything we are limited to make a simple copy and paste, translated and adapted, in an article originally appeared a few days ago in the Guardianwhich was based on forecast data for a research company that embarrassing them then quickly retreated.
In all these articles we talked aboutPathaccording to the rumors that Facebook users would be subtracting.For whom he had never heard of, Path is a social network where you can have up to 150 connections. Circulating since 2010. He had to do a bang even then. A little 'as the Diaspora , what for months has been defined by what journalists like to call our own "bibles online information tech" as the alternative to Facebook. Raise your hand if one of you has ever heard of. And especially those who have never used for more than five seconds in a row.

The characteristic of the 150 connections Path is its biggest limitation.Facebook is a deadly technique to gain visibility. It is a special channel that users and companies use to divert traffic to your content or to discover others of a viral infection. There is no other alternative that works better and has the same appeal. Not even Twitter. Path is just one of many. I do not think that he will erode significant margins to Facebook. And do not think that's still got to Zuckerberg's time to worry.

The jackals of the social network

By exploiting the image of famous people or events of immediate media coverage build Facebook pages that refer to the contents or external sites.Making pay handsomely. That's who are the modern jackals of the network.


Massimo Troisi
They are the jackalsof social networks.They are individuals or companies who, riding the wave of emotional events of great media coverage, profit from unscrupulous improperly exploiting the image of certain people or specific events.
To understand how this thriving market you have to make a short introduction. Facebook pages that have hundreds of thousands of fans are little gold mines. The visibility at the time of the network is expensive. And if you have it you can resell the form of advertising. Collect a large fan base on one page, however, is not at all easy. Unless you're a celebrity. And if you're not, you can always impersonate him. Then, if the character in question is passed to a better life boom is guaranteed.

The purpose of the facade of these pages is to keep alive the memory of the person to whom they are dedicated. They are able to reach millions of fans.Viewed this way it would be all very noble. If it were not that between an update and the other posts that appear more and more often with the character in question has nothing to do anything. A few hours ago on the page dedicated to Massimo Troisi , who has 1.1 million fans, appeared thisrenovation that will take you to an external site with Troisi and that has very little to do. The question is why?

Facebook Home: a flop announced

Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Facebook
Facebook Home, the launcher for Android on 4 April by Zuckerberg does not receive the expected success. And the HTC First, the first Facebook Phone, an embarrassing flop.
The premise seemed great. Rumors circulated for months. Mark Zuckerberg would have to present a brand new smartphone weblog Facebook . A few days before the event last April 4, the rumors were, however, scaled down bad. So much so that when we saw that Zuckerberg fiddled with Facebook Home , in many we wondered if it was some kind of bad joke.
The idea could also spark a bit of interest. The enthusiasm, however, is immediately turned off. Just the time of install it, try it for a couple of minutes and can not wait to get rid of. Building Home is very bad.According to the statistics of the Play Store Google has been downloaded over one million times. If they look a lot, Mark Zuckerberg had said some time ago:
"We also realize that a phone and as a result we get that 10 million people use it, for we do not shift the balance of power. Facebook has a billion users. "
Imagine a software that effort just to reach the one million downloads.What a fool.
On a scale from 1 to 5 where the average score with the launcher Facebook was evaluated by users is 2.2. Embarrassing. But the worst is that the HTC First, the smartphone with Facebook Home preinstalled, which HTC has filed April 4, will be withdrawn from the market in record time. Sales are shamefully low. Just 15,000 units sold despite the efforts of the operator AT & T, just to get rid of it, he placed just $ 0.99 . Yes, you read that right.Less than a dollar. Nothing to do. It will propose again what I wrote at the time on the ' First HTC :
"Towards the end he made an appearance on stage lightning Peter Chou, CEO of HTC. He was holding the HTC first, the first Android smartphone that will mount the native interface "Home" on Facebook. He talked about yes and no for thirty seconds. It did not seem much pleased. Maybe he was wondering what he was doing there and if that terminal then there was such a great need. "

Post By: Chhoy Dany

The anger of investors against Facebook, "The IPO? A disaster »

Growing discontent of investors. In one year, burned 37% of the capital invested.

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook
little over a year ago had left shot, with the most impressive public offer (IPO) in American history, finishing in first place in the rankings, followed by Visa and General Motors. Thirteen months later, investors would remember with some discomfort right in the face unshaven, all smiles, Mark Zuckerberg that the headquarters of the Nasdaq in New York sounded amused the bell to kick off the trade of the day. Too bad that after months of fun and exciting there is little left.
Facebook shares have begun to lose value right away. In September they reached the bottom of the 17 dollars. In May this year had recovered to 28.Today, after a steady downward trend in the last two months, slipping to 23 dollars.
With the Facebook IPO has picked up the beauty of $ 16 billion. Too bad that investors large and small we have recovered more than 37% of capital spent to buy the shares of gold that turned out to be instead of the fake stuff. A huge speculation in respect of the classic American tradition of creative financing.
For landing on an exchange, Morgan Stanley estimated Facebook 107 times more than the social network had gained in the last 12 months. A few days before the IPO, the investment bank increased by 25% the number of shares available alzandone the same price. The accounts if they are well made. Given the hype around social networks, someone must have thought that the pump action and the price more than reasonable limits could easily attract a lot of investors. It's called strategy "hit and run". Hit and run. If the architects well, in general, in many bite. You take home a lot of money and leave investors in their underwear.
Bloomberg today reported some details of the first meeting that Facebook has recently had with shareolder. Many have kept silent their frustration.Someone has cut short: "it was a disaster!» . Someone else asked , "I would like to know if you have some strategy to make up the price of shares in a not too distant future" .

Zuckerberg in the crossfire gave the usual answer that now struggles to repeat for months, to dampen the controversy: "We are creating a network that is gaining in value every day in the world and we believe that by doing so, in the long run will create the best possible value for our shareholders. " It will be. In the last week the shares have slipped another 13.81%.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Glorious Facebook alliance formed to give Cisco a poke


It is starting to look like Facebook's Open Compute Project (OCP) is to be a glorious alliance including IntelBroadcom, and others which aims to give Cisco a kick in the nadgers.
The big idea was to develop a top-of-rack switch that could boot nearly any type of networking software using open hardware specifications. And now it appears that will put the fear of god into Cisco's core business.
According to Ars Technica,  Intel, Broadcom, Mellanox, and Cumulus Networks have contributed specs and software. Now it is just a matter of finalising the design.
Writing in his bog, Frank Frankovsky, VP of hardware design and supply chain operations at Facebook and head of the Open Compute Project said the the project is on track to "help software-defined networking continue to evolve and flourish".
Chipzilla's contribution includes a specification for a bare-metal, top-of-rack switch. This will be a 48x4 10/40G switch [48 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports and four 40 Gig ports and all necessary subsystems for switching, control CPU, peripherals, external interfaces, power, cooling, and mechanical enclosure.
Surprisingly for Chipzilla, the spec does not require Intel components, although it probably will have them in abundance.
Broadcom contributed a network switch specification of its own, which contains popular leaf and spine switch configurations and feature requirements.
This network switch specification is based on the widely deployed Trident switch architecture which happens to be a product made by Broadcom.
Mellanox has thrown in a top-of-rack switch specification, and Cumulus Networks is contributing its Open Network Install Environment which is a "network boot loader to install software on network switches".
Others that might be miffed at the way that this switch's is progressing are HP and Dell. This switch removes a lot of the software they insert into general-purpose products, making them cheaper and more efficient.
If successful, Arista Networks, and Dell's Force 10 division will also find more competition in the market.
Facebook will be one user, but there are seven to 10 potential users of the open network tech, including Fidelity and Goldmine Sex.
Cisco claims it is "not bovered" by the Open Compute Project. It points to the fact it is involved in open networking projects such as OpenDaylight, which it thinks will defeat Facebook's glorious alliance. 


Post By: Chhoy Dany

Facebook shares rocket after earnings boosted by mobile advertising

Company said mobile advertising revenue represented approximately 49% of $1.8bn in ad revenue in third quarter of 2013

Facebook's revenues were over $2bn for the quarter, up from $1.26bn for the same period last year. Photo: Dado Ruvic/Reuters
Mobile advertising now accounts for just short of half of Facebook's revenues, the social network company announced Wednesday sending shares soaring in after hours trading.
Releasing its latest quarterly results, Facebook said mobile advertising revenue represented approximately 49% of $1.8bn in ad revenue the company made in the third quarter of 2013.
Fears that Facebook was facing difficulties adapting to the rapidly growing mobile market contributed to its rocky share sale last year. It took Facebook close to a year to surpass the $38 price its shares initially sold for. Facebook's shares soared close to 10% to $53.88 in after-hours trading as investors digested the mobile figures.
Facebook is expected to account for a 15.8% share of worldwide mobile ad spending in 2013, up from a 5.35% share last year, according to analyst eMarketer. Google is expected to grab 53.17% of the worldwide mobile ad market this year, up slightly over a 52.36% share in 2012.
Mobile advertising is the fastest growing advertising category. The overall mobile ad market worldwide is expected to grow 89% to $16.65bn in 2013, eMarketer estimates, up from just $8.8bn in 2012.
Overall, Facebook's revenues were over $2bn for the quarter, up from $1.26bn for the same period last year. Net income was $425m, compared to a loss of $59m last year.
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and chief executive, said: "The strong results we achieved this quarter show that we're prepared for the next phase of our company, as we work to bring the next five billion people online and into the knowledge economy."
The company said there was an average of 728m daily active users (DAUs) on Facebook in September 2013, an increase of 25% year-over-year. The number of monthly active users was 1.19bn as of September 30, 2013, an increase of 18% year-over-year.

Mark Zuckerberg's sister Randi wants kids to go offline

Randi Zuckerberg has written a children's book extolling the virtues of the real world over social networks such as Facebook. What will her brother think?
Randi Zuckerberg, former marketing director of Facebook Inc and now children's author. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images

Name: Randi Zuckerberg
Age: 31.
Appearance: Familiar. Familial.
What's that – are we doing anagrams? Let me see – Drain bucker zerg? Graze brine duck? Raze Dick R Bunger? Grand cruze Rik? Nardi grub zeeck? No, this isn't right.
Really? It took you til Nardi grub zeeck to figure that out? Leave me alone.
What is it then, if you're so clever? It is a she and she is the sister of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and former director of market development and spokeswoman for the company.
I thought the name rang a bell. And gave you a strange insistent urge to divide everything in my life into reductive binary categories.
Like? Yeah. Or dislike.
So, what's Randi done? Found a way to divert the few pennies in the world not owned by her brother or Tesco into her pocket? Annexed the rest of digital space? Built a better mousetrap? She has written a children's book.
Big deal. I could write a children's book. "Once upon a time, a little boy sat in front of a screen IM-ing and playing unfathomable games until his brain deliquesced and ran slowly out of his ears. His mummy and daddy were sad but to blame. The end." Actually, her book is about a girl called Dot who learns that there is more to life than scrolling through screens. It's designed to encourage children to get kids off their smartphones and tablets and back out into the world.
What does Dot do? She finds that you can "swipe" with a paintbrush and make lovely pictures. That "sharing" can be something you do with a cookie and a dog. And that "tapping" can also be a kind of dancing.
That's … I think you'll have to excuse me – I seem to have got something in my eye. I know. Like. She's got a book for adults, called Dot Complicated, coming out too. It teaches adults how to navigate the digital world and understand privacy issues.
Won't this cause a family friction, what with Mark's apparent ambition to colonise everyone's thinkmeat and put the contents online as soon as possible? Who's to say? It depends whether blood is thicker than money.
Do say: "I shall pre-order through a non-tax-evading book supplier right away."
Don't say: "Is there an ebook edition?"

Snapchat rejects $3bn Facebook buyout

The messaging system, which registers 5 million daily users, would have been Facebook's most expensive ever acquisition
Evan Spiegel, Snapchat’s 23-year-old co-founder and chief executive, is reportedly waiting until early next year before considering any offers Photograph: Jae C Hong/AP
Snapchat, the fast-growing messaging system, has reportedly rejected a $3bn buyout offer from Facebook.
The Wall Street Journal, citing sources close to the negotiations, said the all-cash offer came as other investors were valuing the loss making two-year-old company at over $4bn. At $3bn Snapchat would be the most expensive acquisition Facebook has ever made.
The company is believed to have over 5 million active daily users and, according to Pew research, has been downloaded by 9% of US mobile users. The service allows people to send messages and photos with an expiration date so that they are deleted from the recipient’s mobile device shortly after they are received. In September Snapchat said it was handling over 350m messages a day.
According to the Journal, Evan Spiegel, Snapchat’s 23-year-old co-founder and chief executive, is waiting until early next year before considering any offers in the hope that Snapchat’s numbers will grow enough to justify an even larger valuation.
The company’s valuation has been growing as fast as its user base. In June Snapchat raised $60m from investors that valued the company at $800m. Facebook reportedly offered $1bn for Snapchat earlier this year. Last month top tech blog All Things D reported that the company was in negotiations with China’s Tencent over an investment that would value the firm at over $3.6bn.
That news followed an announcement last month from Pinterest, the social scrapbooking company, that it had raised $225m in new funds at a price that valued the firm at $3.8bn.
Snapbook’s valuation, and those of its social media peers, will likely have soared after Twitter’s initial public offering this month, which has valued the loss making short message system at over $23bn.
The spectacular growth in the company’s valuation echoes that of Groupon, the online discount company that rejected a $6bn offer from Google before filing for an IPO. In late 2011 when the company started trading it was valued at over $16bn but soon crashed to as low as $3.7bn. It has since recovered and is now worth $6.8bn.

Facebook and Twitter should block anonymous messages – PM's adviser

Claire Perry, David Cameron's adviser on child internet safety, says option from internet firms would reduce bullying online
Tory whip Claire Perry, David Cameron's adviser on child internet safety has called on Twitter and Facebook to allow the blocking on anonymous messages. Photograph: Richard Saker

Twitter and Facebook should let users block anonymous messages if they are serious about stopping bullying and trolling on social media sites, David Cameron's adviser on child internet safety has said.
Claire Perry, a Conservative whip, said internet firms are currently not doing enough to tackle bullying online and called for more prosecutions of people who make online threats,that she described as misogynistic.
In a hearing with the House of Commons media committee, she said bullying would be "driven down" if users could choose to block communication from anonymous users.
Perry, who received online threats over the summer, said there should be an online verification process, so people can see if they are dealing with other users who have supplied their real names or chosen to remain anonymous.
"Having been on the receiving end of a storm of Twitter abuse, I don't think the companies do enough. Part of the problem is anonymity of usage," she said.
"People post about how they'd like to rape you and kill you because they think you don't know who you are. If there was some way of the company knowing and being prepared to verify that identify and to show you that verification, I think it would lead to a diminuation in that kind of behaviour.
"I don't think the companies do enough and I think there is a great concern around it given the US legal framework around which the global companies operate."
Perry is the prime minister's adviser on the commercialisation and sexualisation of children, concentrating on the impact of online pornography, but she is also working on the issue of internet bullying.
Asked whether there should be more prosecutions for trolling, she said: "Yes I do. I think it is deeply misogynistic. We did see cautions and apologies [over the summer]. But I think actually prosecucuting for what I think is pretty vile behaviour would be helpful.
Ed Vaizey, a Tory culture minister, said he thought there was "mileage in sitting down with the social media companies" to discuss Perry's suggestions.
Earlier in the hearing, a Twitter executive said anybody could use an alias, while Facebook said it asked people to use their real names but did not carry out checks unless there were complaints.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Facebook vola in borsa: e segna +35%

Ma insomma, che razza di modi. Ci siamo accaniti tutti quanti contro il povero Mark Zuckerberg che oggi, quando invece ci sarebbe da festeggiare, nessuno se lo fila di striscio. Già me lo immagino tutto mogio, chiuso nel suo ufficio di Palo Alto, mentre accarezza avvilito il manto peloso del fedele barboncino Beast. Un po’ come in queste ore, per altri motivi, starà toccando all’oramai nazionalpopolare Dudù.
Dopo le sonore legnate che per mesi la stampa in ogni angolo del pianeta gli ha riservato, pare quasi che nessuno si sia accorto che da qualche tempo il social network per eccellenza, al Nasdaq, ha invertito la tendenza.
Per chi non l’avesse seguita, la storia va raccontata dall’inizio. Il 18 maggio 2012, giorno dello sbarco in borsa, Facebook aveva piazzato le proprie azioni a 38 dollari. Neanche il tempo di godersi la gloria che subito sono cominciati i sudori freddi. Tre mesi e il valore era già dimezzato. A settembre dello scorso anno sfioravano i 17 dollari. Il 13 giugno 2013, su Bloomberg era comparso un articolo che aveva sparso non poco imbarazzo attorno al povero Mark. Gli investitori piuttosto inferociti. Per qualcuno l’offerta pubblica di acquisto era stata «un disastro». E giù altre bastonate, sangue e denti rotti.
E poi, invece, vedi il destino. Pochi giorni più tardi è accaduto il miracolo. Le azioni Facebook hanno cominciato a risalire. Dalla quotazione in borsa hanno guadagnato più di 13 dollari, pari a un aumento di oltre il 34%. Venerdì hanno chiuso gli scambi a Wall Street a 51,24 dollari. Ma una soddisfazione a Mark, almeno per una volta, gliela vogliamo dare?

Trimestrale record per Facebook: 2,02 miliardi di fatturato e 1,19 miliardi di iscritti

Facebook supera le aspettative degli analisti e, nei risultati della trimestrale, mostra una sensibile crescita del proprio fatturato rispetto allo stesso periodo dello scorso anno. Il fatturato totale è salito a 2,02 miliardi di dollari con un aumento del 60% in più rispetto al terzo trimestre fiscale del 2012 superando le previsioni di 1,91 miliardi. I profitti si sono attestati intorno ai 425 milioni di dollari contro i 59 milioni di perdite dello stesso periodo dello scorso anno. Il social continua a crescere registrando un numero di iscritti pari a 1,19 miliardi di persone. Gli utenti giornalieri sono saliti a 728 milioni con un aumento del 25% rispetto allo scorso anno. Gli accessi dai dispositivi mobili continuano ad aumentare, registrando un aumento del 45% rispetto al 2012, con 874 milioni di utenti attivi al mese.