Facebook and Yahoo tipped to settle lawsuit

This week the folks at Facebook and Yahoo have been reported to be settling things between one another in regards to a collection of patent suits that were being fired at one another earlier this year. According to sources close to the dealings speaking with AllThingsD, a deal will be announced later today in which no money will change hands, somehow or another. Instead it seems that a strategic deal has been met and will be working with joint online advertising sales and patent cross-licensing.

When Yahoo sued Facebook back in March, the former said that the latter had infringed on 10 patents, some of which included bits on online advertising technology. This situation prompted Yahoo to claim that Facebook was “one of the worst performing sites for advertising” before they started using Yahoo-owned ideas.

Facebook responded with a lawsuit just a month later, claiming that Yahoo was prioritizing “litigation over innovation” and that Yahoo’s claims were bogus. Now it seems that the two have shaken hands in favor of moving beyond the situation entirely! Stay tuned for more as the full extent of the situation is revealed (or so we expect) later today.


Facebook and Yahoo tipped to settle lawsuit is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Reunions in the Time of Facebook

One of my Facebook friends recently posted about her 20-year high school reunion. We went to the same high school, and she was a year ahead of me. I have perhaps a dozen other Facebook friends from my high school who were all in that same graduating class, but she was the only one who mentioned the reunion. This took me by surprise for a couple of reasons. First, I had forgotten that my own high school 20-year reunion will happen next year. For those readers who are now thinking about how old I am to be writing such a thing, trust me, you won’t feel so old when you get here.

[Images credit: Kristina Alexanderson]

Second, I had almost forgotten that high school reunions exist. For whatever reason, so did my friends who should have been in attendance. Now, reunions are highly charged affairs. I attended my 10-year reunion and I had a wonderful time. I hated high school but, perhaps miraculously, my reunion reminded me of all the good I liked, and also taught me how much people can grow up and mature in the best ways after high school. It taught me how ridiculous you look if you stick to the same attitude that made you feel so powerful back then.

Some people still hold old grudges. Some people have simply disconnected themselves and do not want to go back. Some don’t see the point at all. I’m an admitted nostalgia junky, so reunions have a special appeal to me. But I understand many people don’t feel the same way.

Most of all, I wonder how many of those people skipped the reunion because of Facebook. While I might have argued from this perspective a few years ago, I wouldn’t take this stand now. But it’s obvious the reunion concept is in danger because of social networking.

Why bother going to a reunion? If I was close friends with you in High School, I kept in touch with you. If I liked you just a little, I’ve already connected with you on Facebook. If I didn’t like you, I probably connected with you, then dropped you after I realized I didn’t want to hear about your stupid life. And if I hated you, I’m definitely stalking you from afar and hoping your life goes to trash before my eyes. Thank God for Facebook’s horrible privacy settings. The morons who bullied me back then will never figure them out.

It was for this reason that I skipped my 15-year college reunion. First of all, 15 year reunions are just stupid. Reunions come in 10-year increments. That’s the rule. I know 25-year sounds enticing, but trust me on this one. Skip it and wait until your 30-year.

I skipped my college reunion because I keep in touch regularly with everyone from my class with whom I was friends. And college is much more mixed in terms of class years. I had far more friends from other classes, and none of them would be attending. So why bother? But high school is more regimented. You tend to go to class with students from your graduating year. Most of my high school friends graduated with me.

I hope the high school reunion does not die in the face of Facebook. The argument that you will keep in touch with the people most important to you, regardless of social networks or contrived picnics in your old home town, is simply untrue.

“The world is a small place and it’s easy to connect”

Humans live in very limited spheres, but feel like we exist as part of the whole world. When I’m in New York City and I happen to run into my friend who is a lawyer in Turkey, or my actor friend who works mostly in southeast Asia (true story, and on the same day, no less), I feel like the world is a small place and it’s easy to connect. But in fact, it is too easy to lose touch even with people who are very important to us. The idea that we’ll keep in touch with those we love best is self-defeating. What’s the value in giving up on trying to keep the channels of a relationship open?

Facebook is not an artificial class reunion, it is simply a tool. You still have to do the legwork yourself. Facebook is no more forcing us to be friends with old acquaintances than the telephone is forcing us to call our parents. There is no reason to disdain Facebook simply because of the strange friendships we have dug out from the backyard of our childhood homes, hosed off, and trotted around on our handlebars.

There is value in seeing people in person. Going to my 10-year reunion was cathartic, even though I hadn’t accomplished so much. I had a wife (now ex-), but no kid yet. I was a teacher, and I’ve since changed careers. But it did help me bridge a divide in unexpected ways. Being friends with people on Facebook gives me an idea of what they look like, what they are into now, who they ended up with. But it doesn’t have the same impact as talking to them personally and seeing them in motion.

I had forgotten that we are all real people. In the crowded space between high school and now, my adolescent emotions had clouded my impression of these people to such an extent that I had imbued them with a power and an importance that was unsustainable. I’ll admit I was still holding some old grudges, but those grudges were disfigured by the emotional maelstrom that is our youth.

The best part of the reunion was seeing people who were not so important to me that I wanted to rekindle a real-world friendship. On Facebook, those casual acquaintances are answers to trivia questions. But in real life, they help fill out and make whole the piecemeal memories we’re stuck replaying in our minds over and over 10, 20, or 30 years later.

Facebook does not have to supplant reunions, but it will if people do not make the effort to attend in real life. Ironically, it’s a leap of faith, like Facebook itself. On Facebook, you must contribute. You MUST. If you don’t contribute, I don’t contribute, and nobody contributes except for the people I want to hear from the least. You must have faith that I won’t see your contribution as narcissistic. I want to hear from you, that’s why we’re friends.

The same is true for reunions. Don’t go to your high school reunion for you. Go for me. Even if you won’t get much out of it, you may be surprised by who is happy to see you, and how much your presence means. En masse, the effect increases geometrically as more and more people attend.

For a little while, as Facebook grew in popularity, it might have made sense for Facebook to replace the reunion. But now the tables have turned. We turned to Facebook to remind ourselves of the people we had lost. We should turn again to reunions to remind ourselves that they are real people after all.


Reunions in the Time of Facebook is written by Philip Berne & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Facebook email bug larger than first expected

This week it’s become apparent that Facebook and its switch over to automatically displaying an @facebook.com email address for all users is causing more of a problem than it inevitably would have had “nothing” gone wrong. The folks responsible for making big changes such as the switchover we’ve reported on earlier with Facebook‘s contact emails are certainly used to being shoved around a bit each time they decide that a big aesthetic or behind-the-scenes change has to be made to the social network. What they’re probably not entirely prepared for is when a bug – such as the one creeping up their leg right now – is revealed.

One of the larger bugs to come out of this ordeal is a situation in which the newest email to be added to the Facebook contact list is used for notifications. In this case, that means that anyone who relied on their notifications to see when Facebook needed their attention would have to check their Facebook email – available only on Facebook – to see if they had any Facebook updates. That’s not exactly what Facebook developers had in mind when they decided on the switch.

Fix your Facebook email right this second with these simple instructions.

Mobile users are also experiencing a similar bug in which Facebook’s efforts to make their social networking ecosystem more of a “consistent” one has also resulted in emails being lost – and in some cases, not even showing up in the specified Facebook email box. Facebook’s ghost in the machine – or perhaps it’s a goblin – continues to wreck the days of thousands as Facebook developers continue to hack away at their brains to fix it all as soon as possible.

Have a peek at our timeline below to see the brief history of this bug and the events that immediately preceded it.


Facebook email bug larger than first expected is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


GM and Facebook said to be rekindling advertising flame

Back in May, General Motors suddenly ceased advertising on Facebook. No specific details were given, although it was believed that the advertising campaign had little impact. Now the Wall Street Journal reports that GM and Facebook are in talks to resume advertising on the social network. Senior executives have confirmed that both companies are currently in talks.

GM’s global marketing chief, Joel Ewanick, and Carolyn Everson, Facebook’s worldwide head of sales, met at an event in Cannes sometime in June. According to sources familiar with the matter, Facebook is trying to bring GM back as an advertiser, promising to provide better data on how it can turn commercials into cash. It won’t give GM preferential treatment over other advertisers, though.

According to sources, GM hasn’t decided to return to Facebook just yet as it has yet to see any form of advertising effectiveness from the platform. GM has also reportedly been meeting with digital advertising firms in order to gain a better idea of how to market its products for Facebook. GM is said to have spent $10 million on advertising with Facebook, a fraction of its $1.8 billion US ad spending, and also a very small part of Facebook’s $3.7 billion revenue in 2011.


GM and Facebook said to be rekindling advertising flame is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


O2 says calling just fifth most-used task on smartphones, suggests we call them ‘best buds’ instead

Galaxy Note review top

Virtually anyone who’s been a frequent smartphone user for the past few years has already suspected it, but O2 UK has provided some possible evidence in a study: calling is one of the last things we do these days. Although the number hasn’t gone down, the 12.1 minutes of time study subjects spend talking every day is just fifth-highest on the list of what they do with their smartphones. Web browsing (24.8 minutes) and social networking (17.5 minutes) dictate the largest slices of time, but the combined effect of all those apps, media playback and messaging leave voice as just 9.5 percent of the 128 minutes of daily use. The British carrier suggests the shift is more a virtue of smartphones becoming all-singing, all-dancing companions in our lives than from some disdain for human contact: about half of those asked have replaced alarm clocks and watches with their phones, while 39 percent depend on their smartphone as their main camera. There’s even 28 percent that no longer feel the need for a laptop. O2’s insights aren’t all-encompassing and don’t necessarily reflect how everyone uses their devices — they do, however, explain why we’re turning to phones that aren’t all that comfortable as phones.

O2 says calling just fifth most-used task on smartphones, suggests we call them ‘best buds’ instead originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Jul 2012 02:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Atlantic  |  sourceO2 UK  | Email this | Comments

Twitter cuts ties with LinkedIn after 2-year partnership

After a lovely hand-holding two years of partnership between the two, LinkedIn and Twitter will no longer be working with one-another. Twitter has cut off tweets on LinedIn this week and LinkedIn will no longer have the option to have Tweets shared directly through their site from a user’s control panel. This move is part of a set of actions pushed by Twitter to increase the strictness of their requirements for developers using their API to make their own custom apps.

Where before you’d have been able to sync LinkedIn and Twitter with the click of a button, you’ll now have to seek out 3rd party apps. In a blog post today, Ryan Roslansky, LinkedIn head of content, wrote the following.

“If you had previously synced your LinkedIn and Twitter accounts, and selected the option to share Tweets on LinkedIn, those Tweets generated from Twitter will no longer appear on LinkedIn. There will be no other changes to your LinkedIn experience.” – Roslansky

Twitter will this year be increasing its enforcement of its so-called “Developer Rules of the Road” and will be doubling down on keeping their brand consistent across the web. Twitter product manager Michael Sippy added in a blog post about developer upgrades in the near future:

“We’re building tools for publishers and investing more and more in our own apps to ensure that you have a great experience everywhere you experience Twitter, no matter what device you’re using. … Ultimately, we want to make sure that the Twitter experience is straightforward and easy to understand — whether you’re on Twitter.com or elsewhere on the web.” – Sippey


Twitter cuts ties with LinkedIn after 2-year partnership is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Foursquare Connected App platform lets other apps interact with check ins

Foursquare Connected App platform lets other apps interact with check ins

It turns out Foursquare’s massive 5.0 revamp was just the start of the changes, as the location sharing app unveiled a new twist with the launch its Connected Apps platform. Available as a developer preview, it lets the makers of apps like Untappd, Instagram or The Weather Channel connect directly with the Foursquare app. Many apps were already connected via the API, and once users upgrade to the latest version on Android or iOS their checkins pull information from those apps into Foursquare itself. That means they get things like the weather forecast on their first check in of the day from The Weather Channel, see what songs their friends have shared at a particular location via Soundtracking or beer recommendations from Untappd. Developers can get all the info on how it works at the overview, the rest of us can see the list of enabled apps on the official blog post.

Foursquare Connected App platform lets other apps interact with check ins originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Jun 2012 04:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink About Foursquare  |  sourceFoursquare Blog, Developer Overview  | Email this | Comments

150m access Google+ each month

Google has announced the latest usage stats for Google+, the company’s social network rival to Facebook. According to Google’s Vic Gundotra, Google+ is seeing over 150m people using it every month, with half of those accessing it daily. Overall there are 250m registered users.

Those daily users are spending more than an hour on the site too, something Gundotra is particularly proud of. It’s not clear what the average use-time among all users every month is.

Google is also seeing more users access Google+ when mobile than from the desktop browser version. That echoes Facebook’s experience of mobile, which has seen greater-than-expected takeup of users coming via their phones.

Usage figures are contentious, of course, as Google automatically signs up many new users to Google+ when they register YouTube or Gmail, or auto-upgrade them. Facebook is currently seeing 526m daily users access its site.


150m access Google+ each month is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google+ on Android, iPad goes tablet-sized

Google on Android, iPad goes tabletsized

Google+ just got a makeover very recently, but it was still very much oriented towards phones — that’s been solved as of today. The social networking app is now optimized for Android tablets and the iPad, with a whole new navigation system and Hangout video chats suited to bigger screens. The layout is landscape-friendly and, if you have a new iPad, will take advantage of every pixel on that Retina display. Android users can get the update today; iPad owners will have to wait for a release coming “soon.” Android phone owners are getting some of the benefits of the supersized interface in their own, more modest screen sizes as well.

Check out our full coverage of Google I/O 2012’s opening keynote at our event hub!

Google+ on Android, iPad goes tablet-sized originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jun 2012 13:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle Play  | Email this | Comments

Facebook’s Find Friends Nearby feature falls off the map, leaves buddy locating to other social apps

We’re happy to chat up our Facebook friends on the web, but empowering them to track us down in person makes that virtual social experience feel a bit too real. Perhaps that was the reasoning behind the mysterious disappearance of the company’s new Find Friends Nearby feature, which bit the dust yesterday just as quickly as it first appeared. During its hours-long tenure, the new tracking tab didn’t give precise friend location information, but did provide a list of buddies in an undisclosed vicinity, making it possible for some not-so-top-tier contacts to realize that you’re still in Tulsa, and didn’t actually make that move to Timbuktu. Whatever the reason, Find Friends Nearby is now very much lost, but it could theoretically make its return at any point in the future. For now, you’ll need to return to keeping an eye on acquaintances the old-fashioned way.

Facebook’s Find Friends Nearby feature falls off the map, leaves buddy locating to other social apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jun 2012 16:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWired  | Email this | Comments