This WhatsApp Redesign Would Make Facebook's $16 Billion Buy Worth It

This WhatsApp Redesign Would Make Facebook's $16 Billion Buy Worth It

Whatsapp has been one of the most talked about start-up giants in recent memory. Building upon the most basic of mobile services, messaging WhatsApp has managed to monetise and evolve the service through cross platform integration and making it free (among many other things). Following the $16billion acquisition of WhatsApp by Facebook I thought that this is a good as time as any to look at what this means for WhatsApp and what changes both aesthetic and functional might be implemented by it.

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WhatsApp denies post-Facebook privacy changes

WhatsApp founder Jan Koum has spoken out on concerns about privacy and data protection following its acquisition by Facebook, insisting that nothing will change in what individual information it collects … Continue reading

WhatsApp Reiterates ‘Partnership’ With Facebook Doesn’t Put Users’ Data At Risk

WhatsApp Reiterates Partnership With Facebook Doesnt Put Users Data At Risk

Not so long ago Facebook announced that it is going to acquire WhatsApp for a staggering $19 billion. Since then there has been a lot of debate over the price and this acquisition in general. Privacy groups are concerned about what this means for users’ data. Today WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum took to the company’s official blog to “set the record straight.” Koum reiterates that even after its “partnership” with Facebook, WhatsApp will continue to users data and privacy just as before.

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  • WhatsApp Reiterates ‘Partnership’ With Facebook Doesn’t Put Users’ Data At Risk original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    The Man Who Tried to Invent the Like Button in the 1930s

    The Man Who Tried to Invent the Like Button in the 1930s

    Think Facebook invented the Like button? Think again. Back in the 1930s one man hoped to create a device that could send feedback to radio stations with the push of a button. He called it the "radiovota." Get it? The radio… voter.

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    Facebook Source Code Removed

    This article was written on August 16, 2007 by CyberNet.

    Facebook logoEarlier this week there was a lot of chatter about how a portion of Facebook’s source code was leaked and then published on a newly created blog, Facebook Secrets. The leak was attributed to a bug on a “single server that was misconfigured and then fixed immediately.” It certainly wasn’t a good day for Facebook as the code quickly spread around the Internet, much like what we saw when the HD DVD crack code spread like a wild fire.

    Facebook publicly stated that those who spread the code were violating the law, and asked people not distribute it further. Of course that alone wasn’t going to stop most people from spreading it around as much as possible, so they took matters into their own hands. 

    The blog mentioned above, “Facebook Secrets” was created solely for the purpose of distributing the Facebook code. And because it was hosted by Blogger (owned by Google), Google received a DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) take-down notice from Facebook. Google contacted the author of the blog asking that they remove the content, or they’d be forced to remove the content themselves. The author ignored the notice, and of course then the blog post was removed (although the page has been cached by search engines like Google).

    While Google was just doing their job, it’s one of those situations where it doesn’t really even matter that the original post that contained the content is taken down. Just like the HD DVD crack, Facebook’s code has been spread around to so many sites that it will be nearly impossible for Facebook’s legal team to find them all, and send take-down notices. Now the author of the original Facebook Secrets blog has started another one, “Facebook Secrets Again” where he has posted the letters he received from the Blogger team.

    Sounds to me like Facebook needs to spend some time making sure their servers aren’t misconfigured! I don’t know about you, but for me it’s hard to have sympathy for them right now. Afterall, they were the ones that leaked their own code!

    Note: Some sites are reporting that the entire site has been taken down which is not the case. Only the article containing the code was removed, and now the blog is filled with ads.

    Source: Marketing Pilgrim

    Copyright © 2014 CyberNetNews.com

    Facebook Business Manager aims to butter-up brands

    Facebook has quietly developed a new “Business Manager” tool, still in its refinements stage, aiming to help brands better push promotional content into users’ timelines. Why is this big news? … Continue reading

    Facebook’s Zuckerberg calls Obama over internet fears

    Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg called President Obama to complain about the US government presenting a threat to the internet, claiming to be “confused and frustrated” by the recent spying and surveillance … Continue reading

    Facebook Premium Video Ads Coming

    Facebook Premium Video Ads ComingIf you spend plenty of time on Facebook, you might be not be too pleased to hear that video ads will be implemented as part of your Facebook news feed in the coming months. Apparently, Facebook mentioned that 15-second Premium Video Ads will be rolling out with an unnamed “select group of advertisers.” These ads will play themselves automatically, but will not emit any kind of audio until you decide to click on them.

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  • Facebook Premium Video Ads Coming original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    WhatsApp says claims of security flaw are “not accurate”

    Yesterday we mentioned that a technology consultant named Bas Bosschert had published code that would allow developers to build malicious apps that could trick WhatsApp users into giving the app … Continue reading

    The NSA Has Impersonated Facebook To Spread Malware

    The NSA Has Impersonated Facebook To Spread Malware

    So the NSA is spying on you . You’ve known that for quite some time now. What you might not know much about is exactly how they’re doing, and a new report from Ryan Gallagher and Glenn Greenwald offers up some pretty grizzly details about the agency’s worldwide, automated malware network.

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