Facebook Messenger for Firefox launches

Back in October, we mentioned that Firefox was looking for users to help the test its new Firefox Social API. At the time, the testing involved using the Facebook Messenger for Firefox add on that was in beta. This week Facebook Messenger for Firefox is officially available for all users.

To activate Facebook Messenger for Firefox, users need to download the latest version of Firefox. Once the latest version is downloaded and installed, users need to click the “Turn On” button for Facebook Messenger for Firefox. Once the feature is turned on, you’ll be able to chat with your Facebook friends right in your browser even if you’re not on the Facebook website.

The messenger will also deliver new comments and photo tags as well as friend requests and notifications for messages directly to the Firefox toolbar. For times when you don’t want to talk to your Facebook friends, you can hide the sidebar or disable the feature altogether. Mozilla notes that it plans to add more features and access to multiple providers in the future.

That should mean that support for other social networks will be directly integrated into Firefox soon. The full Firefox Social API is available for developers to use to build their own creations now. Check out the video below to see Facebook Messenger for Firefox in action.


Facebook Messenger for Firefox launches is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook asks users to vote on future of voting system, hopes to revise governance policies

Facebook opens polls to decide the fate of its own voting system, hopes to do away with absurd formality

Facebook’s proposed policy tweaks are about to have their day in the polls — not that the social network’s users have much of a chance of shooting them down. Facebook’s current governance policies allow for a vote on proposed changes when more than 7,000 comments are registered — but denying those changes requires a staggering 30 percent of the network’s one billion active users. Ready for some quick math? That’s 300 million negative votes — more than twice as many than the total number of ballots cast in the 2012 US presidential election. Facebook’s proposal cuts the voting system out of the site’s Statement of Rights and Responsibilities, which it says will free it up to explore new ways to involve users in policy changes, such as the new “Ask our Chief Privacy Officer” feature.

The social network’s site governance page also has a new article explaining some of its upcoming policy changes in layman’s terms, which eases readers into the language it uses to describe how it shares information with affiliates, clarifies user content ownership and promises not to remove certain privacy controls. Facebook users happy with the old system have until December 10th to put America’s voter turnout to shame, though their voices will probably be easier to hear after Facebook abandons its impotent democracy.

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Source: Facebook (1), (2)

Social networks responsible for lines at the restroom

Whether you’re at a baseball game, a school function, or your parents’ house on Christmas surrounded in family members, there’s a good chance that at some point you’ll find yourself impatiently waiting for the restroom to free up. What could they being doing in there that takes so long?, you might ask yourself, before rather quickly deciding not to think about what might be going on behind the closed door. According to a study by NM Incite, there’s a good chance they’re checking Facebook and Twitter.

The study by NM Incite revealed that 21-percent of adults in the US ranging from 18 to 24 acknowledge performing some type of social media activity whilst in the restroom. We like to think that activity is limited to browsing status updates and perhaps commenting on a few things, but hey, who are we to judge? One thing is for sure: the days of keeping a magazine rack next to the commode are long gone.

NM Incite’s Vice President of Social Media Solutions Deirdre Bannon had this to say. “Social media is truly everywhere in people’s lives. It is so ingrained and has touched every facet of everything we do all day long. We are literally taking our phones with us to the bathroom and connecting on social media.”

The numbers jump a bit before dropping drastically as the age range increases. Twenty-five-percent of individuals between 25 and 34 use some form of social networking whilst in the restroom, while 15-percent of people between 35 and 44 hop on Facebook or similar networks in the stall. The mixture between the number of men and women who engage in social networking in the restroom is pretty equal.

[via USA Today]


Social networks responsible for lines at the restroom is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Vote On Facebook’s New Policy Changes, Or You’ll Never Get Another Chance

In response to user feedback, Facebook is proposing a set of clarified governance and privacy policy changes, and they want you, the Facebook enthusiast, to vote on them once again! More »

Facebook privacy policy now open to public vote

Learn how to vote on Facebook’s privacy policies and you can make the social network your own – wouldn’t that be amazing? In reality, Facebook will be opening up a collection of privacy policy changing votes that will be open to the public (so long as you’ve got a Facebook profile) from now until December 10th. This vote is being relegated by an independent auditor and may – or may not – actually have an effect on the way those inside Facebook make their decisions regarding said privacy policies – sound like a square deal to you?

The proposed policy changes work with how Facebook handles your data, Instagram bits and pieces, and the possibility of nixing the ability of users like you to vote in this manner in the first place. Each of the changes up for vote this week were proposed just over a week ago and were quickly the subject of controversy at the hands of privacy groups asking Facebook to halt everything top to bottom. Facebook has instead decided, again, to put it all up to a vote.

The rules being voted on are outlined in a rather simple way by Facebook’s Vice President of Public Policy and Marketing Elliot Schrage. The policy changes proposed are outlined as follows:

Ownership of your content. A number of the comments suggested that we were changing ownership of your content on Facebook. We’re not. This is not true and has never been the case. Anyone who uses Facebook owns and controls the content and information they post, as stated in our SRR. They control how that content and information is shared. That is our policy, and it always has been. We’re not proposing to change this key aspect of how Facebook works.

Privacy controls. In our latest set of updates, we proposed to add language reminding you of the difference between privacy settings (which let you decide who can see what you post anywhere on Facebook) and timeline visibility preferences (which impact how things show up on your timeline but don’t impact other parts of Facebook, like news feed, relationship pages, or search results). Some people asked if this means we’re removing controls you currently have over who can see the things you post. We are not. We simply added this language to further explain how these privacy settings and timeline preferences work. In response to your feedback, however, we’re adding additional language to remind you that you can delete things you post or change the audience at any time.

Advertising policies. We’ve always been clear that we are able to provide free services by showing you ads that are relevant to your interests, and we use your posts – including pages you like – to help show these ads. We proposed new language to make it clearer that those likes and posts include topics like religion or political views. This language does not mean that we are changing our Advertising Guidelines, which prohibit advertisers from running ads that assert or imply sensitive personal characteristics, such as race, ethnicity, religion, and sexual orientation. We’ve added additional language, including a link to our guidelines, to this proposal to make that clearer.

The proposed change that would get rid of user voting was suggested recently because of the utter massiveness of the social network and the quickness with which it’s grown since the democratic process was put in place back in 2009. Back then Facebook had closer to 200 million users and the first vote like the one going on now was just 665,654 votes strong – just that many people decided to participate, that is.

The second large vote such as this happened in June with 900 million possible voters turning up as 342,632 actual voters in the end. Now with that total number of Facebook users in all ramping up faster than ever – more than a billion exist amongst Facebook’s ranks – a binding vote would have to be beastly. The rule notes that for a vote to become “binding” – that is, considered by the council that makes the rules – a Facebook rules vote would require “more than 30 percent of all active registered users” to participate. Think you can get 300 million voters to turn out inside Facebook?

[via Facebook]


Facebook privacy policy now open to public vote is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Facebook crushes social network top 10 in 2012 Nielsen report

This week the folks at Nielsen have reported that their most recent findings in studying the web’s usage of social networks has yielded one thing clearer than all else: Facebook takes the cake. They’ve made it clear that in addition to Facebook continuing to bash up the charts by a significant margin, we’ve spent 37% more time this year in the month of July on social networks than we did last year at the same time. In just one year, we’ve tacked on nearly 40% more minutes in a month with Facebook, Twitter, Zynga, and the like.

This study in 2012 shows the top 10 social networks to be Facebook, Blogger, Twitter, WordPress, and Linedin to start, with Facebook equalling nearly three times the amount of unique PC visits over its first competitor, Blogger. The list of 10 continues with Pinterest, Google+, Tumblr, MySpace, and Wikia, with each site from Linedin to Tumblr only having right around 1,000,000 unique visitors different between the two – but again, this is all via the PC market, people working from their desktop.

As for visitors from these social networks via their mobile browser presence, there’s a bit different story. Facebook remains in the lead, while Twitter takes over Blogger and Pinterest jumps 2 places to sit in a clear fourth. WordPress is the last of the top 5 with Linedin being the first with numbers under 10 million, it and Tumblr coming up short by less than 2 million each. The bottom three then are Wikia, Reddit, and MySpace – Reddit’s growth is notable at 153% over what it was a year before, the same for Tumblr at 162% over last year. Pinterest deserves the biggest applause in this category with a massive 4,225% growth rate year over year in the mobile app segment.

As for mobile users using apps, we’ve got a top 5 starting with Facebook and moving on the Twitter, then foursquare, Google+, and Pinterest. This chart shows that not only is Pinterest taking off like a rocket – winning the most improved in each category far and away, the whole mobile social network family is growing at a surprisingly fast rate. Have another peek at this study from a different perspective from earlier today.

[via Nielsen]


Facebook crushes social network top 10 in 2012 Nielsen report is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Mozilla Announces Facebook Messenger For Firefox

Mozilla is finally making it official. Without an word from Mozilla about the beta version of its Firefox Facebook integration feature which we covered last week, the company is now announcing that Facebook Messenger For Firefox is officially available for its users. Built on a new social API for the web, Facebook Messenger for Firefox lets users chat with their friends while keeping them connected with the latest updates wherever they are on the Web, without having to open a new window or tab.

To use Facebook Messenger For Firefox, you will need to get the latest Firefox version. Then, head over to the Facebook Messenger for Firefox page and click the “Turn On” button. Once the feature is enabled, users can now view the nifty Facebook social sidebar on the right side of every page on the browser. Users can also receive notifications for messages and friend requests right from the Firefox toolbar. Mozilla says that the Facebook integration is just the start of making Firefox more social. “We’ll soon add support for more features and multiple providers,” it said. You can try Facebook Messenger for Firefox here.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Teen Arrested After Bragging Crime On YouTube, MSN ‘Money Now’ Launched,

Facebook lottery winning fraudster found out

You know the old adage, if it sounds too good to be true it probably is. I’m sure anyone with a Facebook account has several people who have shared the photograph of a smiling, scraggly bearded Powerball winner over the last few days named Nolan Daniels. I’ve seen several people on my friends list share the photo with the caption “share this and I’ll give $1 million to some random person.”

That photograph was shared by over 2 million people and Nolan Daniels as it turns out is a faker. The man’s full name is Nolan Ryan Daniels, and he is a software engineer and a co-owner of a company called N2 Technologies from Mesa, Arizona. The company provides software for firms in the medical industry.

Daniels’ brother Derek reportedly confirmed his identity to the Savannah Morning News. The lottery winning fraudster’s brother said “I think he craves the love from people.” It’s unclear if the man’s brother was being humorous or has a problem with what Daniels did on Facebook.

So far, Nolan Daniels hasn’t offered any of his own insights as to why he started his ruse. Perhaps in the beginning it was simply a joke on friends that soon expanded massively beyond what he expected. The moral of the story is don’t believe everything you read on Facebook.

[via CNET]


Facebook lottery winning fraudster found out is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Rumor: Facebook could be interested in acquiring WhatsApp

If you see someone with a smartphone, there is a good chance that they might have WhatsApp installed. After all while the app itself might be a paid app (for iOS it requires an upfront payment), it allows users to send messages to friends and family all over the world for free, hold group conversations and exchange various media as long as an internet connection is available. Plus with a report by WhatsApp back in October of 2011 that they are serving 1 billion messages a day, it just seems like a recipe for monetization, and with Facebook having acquired Instagram not too long ago, could WhatsApp be next on their list? (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Samsung rumored to rebrand itself with a new logo, Microsoft to be competing in the TV set top box business?,

Zynga loses Facebook’s favor, shares drop 7%

Zynga and Facebook aren’t the bosom buddies they used to be, and as a result, Zynga’s shares are down 7-percent. This comes after a regulatory filing revealed the contract between the two companies has loosened their ties quite a bit. Among other things, Facebook will be able to start producing its own games for the social network next year, something it previously was not able to.

Zynga is no longer contractually bound to exclusively provide its games on Facebook, nor to give Facebook any exclusive games. Likewise, the company is no longer required to have Facebook advertisements on its properties. For Facebook’s part in this, although the social network is now allowed to produce its own games, it stated the it does not have plans to do so.

This, of course, boots Zynga from the Facebook pedestal upon which it perched, wherein it previously had a special status with the social network. While the company has been taking steps to become more independent, it garners most of its revenue from Facebook, making this move a bit precarious. The relationship is symbiotic, however, with Facebook also making a decent amount of revenue from Zynga, although the amount has dropped almost 50-percent in the last year.

Zynga has been under fire lately for its quiet layoff that took place during Apple’s event last month. Employees were backhanded, given only two hours to pack up their stuff and get out. This came after reports that the company experienced a $23 million loss in the second quarter of this year.

[via Wired]


Zynga loses Facebook’s favor, shares drop 7% is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.