Posts Tagged ‘facebook’

COTW: Facebook Places two-timing

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

ACTION:

Last Thursday morning Facebook announced their location based application: Places.  One of the surprises in the announcement is that the most popular existing location based services are able to integrate with Facebook’s application and share data.

REAL SCENARIO:

I believe that Facebook will play nice and work closely with the competition until Facebook is able to become the dominant player in the game.  Then as the competition introduces new features and continue to evolve Facebook will slowly begin to not support those new features and use the ‘extraneous’ features as a reason to stop supporting that service altogether.  Since most people are already on Facebook, when the user is required to suddenly have to start checking in with Facebook AND another service, well, we all know how lazy users can be.

Till Next Time

what facebook needs to do

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

I’m a user of facebook, like everyone else in the first world.

My mother is a music teacher for a local county school system.  She uses facebook.

Her school system has created a ‘facebook-lite’ site that allows their employees to socialize, coordinate and share information on a secure site in a more relaxed setting than the normal workplace.  When I asked my mother about her experience using the new site she said it was very similar to the functionality of facebook but it was a hassle having to deal with logging in to that site to make sure she’s up-to-date with the latest info.

Thinking about this, I realized that this is a perfect area of expansion for facebook to go into, corporate facebook networks.  Not in it’s current form.  Most large businesses are able to restrict access to their ‘network’ on facebook by requiring anyone joining that network to have an appropriate email address.  What fb needs to do is have private, secure networks that are managed by the businesses that no one outside this network can see anything that happens within it.

Facebook should allow corporations to set up private networks that work as a subset of the main facebook site.  Fb could charge the corporations for this ability and the corporations can benefit from having a very robust, feature-rich, easily accessible site for their employees to socialize and collaborate.  For the end-users this is the easiest solution since you could use your normal fb login and have all your corporate activity integrated with you normal social activity.

If fb gave control of layout, features and user management to the the business, it would allow each business to be responsible only to themselves for all user management.  This could be a major source of revenue for fb which appears to rely almost solely on banner advertisements.  Even charging just a couple dollars a month per user could greatly boost their cash flow and profit margins.

Just my two cents.

Till Next Time

new facebook privacy (or lack thereof)

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

With the firestorm of criticism in the tech world over the privacy changes on facebook this week I thought I would put up a quick little guide for those not aware of how to fix the privacy issue.

Listening to TWiT this week, there was a great discussion of the effect and implications of these new  privacy settings.  An example of the effects of this change is that the founder of facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, had all his personal photos on facebook shared with the public.

Last week facebook prompted everyone to update their privacy settings with their ‘handy’ little form.  The problem is, if you are one of the many people who never manually set their privacy settings then all your activity on facebook will be turned public if you just click through the form without changing anything.

Go to your privacy settings here.

Go through each section of the privacy page to check and make sure your settings are what you want them to be.

One point of emphasis is that the applications on facebook have an level of access to your information that is staggering.  The base privacy settings do not apply to your applications at all.  The scarier part of this situation is that even if you do not have any applications on your profile, companies can get your information from your friends’ applications!

I found out this information listening to TWiT yesterday when they talked about the ACLU app on facebook, ‘What Do Quizzes Really Know About You?‘.  It is a bit heavy-handed but gets the point across.

While I am not happy with the latest developments from facebook, I am somewhat stuck on facebook because all my friends/family are on there.  So I am removing all applications from my account and am blocking all my data from being shared with my friends’ applications.  I’d rather not be inundated with marketing from companies that I had no idea were getting my information.

Till Next Time