Facebook Notes, News and Users Guide


Feb 8, 2015

Mark Zuckerberg donates $75 Millions to support San Fransisco General Hospital

Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of the social networks giant, Facebook, and his wife Priscilla Chan has donated the total of  $75 millions, the amount which is believed to be the largest to be given to the public hospital by an individual.
Making the announcement through his Facebook page, Zuck said:
Today Priscilla and I are announcing a $75 million contribution to support the San Francisco General Hospital.
We believe everyone deserves access to high quality health care. The General is the main public hospital in San Francisco, and it is an important safety net for our community. More than 70% of the families it serves are uninsured or underinsured. It is open to anyone who lives, works in or visits the city.
Priscilla has served at The General over the past couple of years, completing her medical residency as a pediatrician. Every day she has worked with the amazing doctors and nurses making a difference in people's lives. Her experience serving our community has only deepened our commitment to help these families.We are so fortunate that our work in connecting the world through Facebook has given us the ability to give back to our local community, our country and the world -- and to work to improve education, health care and internet access for everyone. To serve our community in San Francisco, we can think of no better place to focus than The General.
To add some specifics, our contribution today will allow The General to double the size of its new Emergency Room and quadruple the number of beds, and provide state of the art equipment for healthcare providers and first responders.
We hope this contribution alongside the great work of other contributors, will help The General to continue to save lives and deliver care to everyone who needs it.
Congratulations Zuck for giving back to the community.

Jan 15, 2013

Aaron Swartz: Guerilla Open Access Manifesto


Information is power. But like all power, there are those who want to keep it for themselves. The world’s entire scientific and cultural heritage, published over centuries in books and journals, is increasingly being digitized and locked up by a handful of private corporations. Want to read the papers featuring the most famous results of the sciences? You’ll need to send enormous amounts to publishers like Reed Elsevier.


There are those struggling to change this. The Open Access Movement has fought valiantly to ensure that scientists do not sign their copyrights away but instead ensure their work is published on the Internet, under terms that allow anyone to access it. But even under the best scenarios, their work will only apply to things published in the future. Everything up until now will have been lost.


That is too high a price to pay. Forcing academics to pay money to read the work of their colleagues? Scanning entire libraries but only allowing the folks at Google to read them? Providing scientific articles to those at elite universities in the First World, but not to children in the Global South? It’s outrageous and unacceptable.


“I agree,” many say, “but what can we do? The companies hold the copyrights, they make enormous amounts of money by charging for access, and it’s perfectly legal — there’s nothing we can do to stop them.” But there is something we can, something that’s already being done: we can fight back.


Those with access to these resources — students, librarians, scientists — you have been given a privilege. You get to feed at this banquet of knowledge while the rest of the world is locked out. But you need not — indeed, morally, you cannot — keep this privilege for yourselves. You have a duty to share it with the world. And you have: trading passwords with colleagues, filling download requests for friends.


Meanwhile, those who have been locked out are not standing idly by. You have been sneaking through holes and climbing over fences, liberating the information locked up by the publishers and sharing them with your friends.


But all of this action goes on in the dark, hidden underground. It’s called stealing or piracy, as if sharing a wealth of knowledge were the moral equivalent of plundering a ship and murdering its crew. But sharing isn’t immoral — it’s a moral imperative. Only those blinded by greed would refuse to let a friend make a copy.


Large corporations, of course, are blinded by greed. The laws under which they operate require it — their shareholders would revolt at anything less. And the politicians they have bought off back them, passing laws giving them the exclusive power to decide who can make copies.


There is no justice in following unjust laws. It’s time to come into the light and, in the grand tradition of civil disobedience, declare our opposition to this private theft of public culture.


We need to take information, wherever it is stored, make our copies and share them with the world. We need to take stuff that's out of copyright and add it to the archive. We need to buy secret databases and put them on the Web. We need to download scientific journals and upload them to file sharing networks. We need to fight for Guerilla Open Access.


With enough of us, around the world, we’ll not just send a strong message opposing the privatization of knowledge — we’ll make it a thing of the past. Will you join us?


Aaron SwartzJuly 2008, Eremo, Italy

Dec 5, 2012

Microsoft expands its social network So.cl


Microsoft has opened up to the wider public its version of a social network, which allows users to share content in an online gallery similar to Pinterest.
Socl - pronounced "social" - allows users to create visual posts. It is powered by Microsoft's search engine Bing.
It has been in private beta test mode for a year and in May was given a low-key launch, aimed mainly at students.
Now anyone with a Facebook or Microsoft account is able to sign up.
Socl was developed by Microsoft's Fuse Labs unit as a "research project... focused on the future of social experiences and learning".
On the website, Microsoft made it clear that it did not intend to go head to head with Facebook or other social networks.
"Socl is an experimental research project with a minimal set of features," it said.
As part of the wider launch, Microsoft has redesigned the homepage of the website.
Users are invited to create "rich, visual collages" based on interests. The posts can be shared on Facebook or Twitter.
Regional interest
There is a People hub, which allows users to discover other profiles and posts, and a Me page that displays their own.
Users can also create video parties, for which they can make a playlist, watch online videos or chat with others.
Richard Edwards, an analyst at research firm Ovum, said that, while the Western world was saturated with social sites, other regions were "ripe for a new type of social network".
Currently the site is most popular in India, according to Google Trends, which monitors search terms around the globe.
Google Trends also maps interest in the site and its data suggests that it peaked mid-year but has since died off, which may throw light on why Microsoft is relaunching the site.
"When it launched in May, Facebook was IPO-ing [initial public offering, of shares] and shortly afterwards Microsoft acquired Yammer so perhaps it didn't want to confuse the market with too many social networks," said Mr Edwards.
Its relaunch could be tied into future products.
"It seems to be geared to tablet devices. There are also rumours that Microsoft could be bringing out an Xbox-style device. The plans for Socl could be linked to as yet unannounced parts of its strategy," said Mr Edwards.

Nov 29, 2012

Facebook tackles groups membership glitch

Facebook had promised that users would be able
to prevent non-members seeing details of its groups

Facebook says it is investigating a fault which has seen some of its members re-registered to groups that they had quit.
One administrator of "secret" groups on the network raised concerns that old memberswould be able to access "highly sensitive" information.
Others have complained of having to leave the groups, one-by-one, again.
Facebook says the glitch would not give access to users' personal details if they were hidden via its settings.
The firm advertises the groups facility as a "private space" where updates, polls and chat messages can be shared between family, co-workers and pupils in a school class.
It adds that a group can be made "secret" to ensure that not only are messages limited to those within it, but that those outside cannot see who else is a member.
"Some users appear to have been re-added to groups that they have left in the past," the firm said in a statement.
"We are investigating the issue."
The problem comes at a time the company is involved in a separate privacy controversy.
It wants to be able to share information between its social network and its other businesses such as recently acquired photo service Instagram, and to stop its members having the right to vote on further changes to its privacy policy.
The move is opposed by campaign groups including the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the Center for Digital Democracy.

Anti-Israel group hacks UN nuclear agency server

The IAEA, based in Vienna,
said it regretted the publication of stolen information

The UN nuclear agency has acknowledged that one of its computer servers was hacked by an anti-Israeli group.
The IAEA said a previously unknown group called Parastoo had posted contact details for more than 100 nuclear experts on the group's website.
Parastoo asked those listed to sign a petition calling for an IAEA investigation into Israel's undeclared nuclear weapons programme.
The IAEA is investigating Iran's controversial nuclear programme.
Israel is widely believed to have nuclear weapons but neither confirms nor denies this under a "strategic ambiguity" policy.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) spokeswoman Gill Tudor said the agency "deeply regrets this publication of information stolen from an old server".
She said the server had been shut down "some time ago" and experts had been trying to eliminate any "possible vulnerability" in it even before it was hacked.
"The IAEA's technical and security teams are continuing to analyse the situation and do everything possible to help ensure that no further information is vulnerable," she added.
The word Parastoo is Farsi for the bird species the swallow and an Iranian girl's name.
The Vienna-based IAEA said the theft concerned "some contact details related to experts working" with the agency.
The names include physicists at US, British, European and Japanese universities as well as researchers at Japan's Atomic Energy Agency, the US government's Los Alamos National Laboratory and Russia's Space Research Institute.
A Western diplomat quoted by Reuters news agency said the stolen data was not believed to include information related to confidential work carried out by the IAEA.
Israel, the US and other Western nations accuse Iran of secretly trying to develop nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran strongly denies.
Earlier this month, the IAEA said that Iran was ready to double the output at its underground uranium enrichment facility at Fordo.
In a report, it said it was unable to conclude that all nuclear material in Iran was for peaceful activities.

Nov 13, 2012

New facebook page for relationships


Are you "in a relationship" on Facebook? If so, you might wish to go to this link: Facebook.com/us.
The page is the newly launched digital version of the relationship between you and your significant other, including posts, events and photos that both of you are tagged in.
Cute, right? Well, not so much, according to the (always cheery) Internet.
"I want to vomit," wrote blogger Jennifer Wright.
Emma Barnett, women's editor at The Telegraph, wrote that she may break up with her husband on Facebook just to get rid of the newly created couple's page.
"Mr. Zuckerberg: by all means keep giving people new tools -- as you did when you created Facebook," she wrote, referring to Facebook's co-founder, Mark Zuckerberg. "But when you start doing things for us -- the experience is anything but social or remotely positive. You have infantilised my relationship for me with the creation of www.facebook.com/us. Only I should get to do that."
A little history makes this seem a bit less dramatic.
Facebook Friendship Pages, which show posts that you and a friend have in common, have existed for more than two years.
So there likely already was a "friendship" page between you and the person who you are "in a relationship" with on the billion-person social network. The main change is that now there is an Internet address -- facebook.com/us -- that redirects to your relationship.
Additionally, all of those Friendship and Relationship pages, starting last Thursday, are being updated to look more like Facebook's Timeline. They're more visual than the old pages.
To see the Facebook version of a friendship with someone in your network, go to their page and click the gear icon at the top right of the page. Click "see friendship."
On his blog, writer Justin McLachlan says the changes should be celebrated.
"There's nothing creepy here, that I can see, just more out of proportion reactions to something new, different and innovative," he wrote in response to The Telegraph's article. "It's no different, really, than typing your name into Google and seeing your face and other personal details from social networks mashed up in sidebar."
If you love someone on Facebook but don't love the new Facebook.com/us pages, here's more news, however, that might bother you: It's impossible to get rid of them.
You can, however, have a say in what content appears on them.
"You cannot deactivate the pages, but you can control what you share on Facebook using the privacy settings for each post," 
Facebook's Jessie Baker wrote in an e-mail to CNN. "The friendship page respects the privacy setting of each post. This means the person viewing the friendship page may see each post elsewhere on Facebook, like on either friend's timeline or in news feed. You can curate your friendship page by hiding stories you do not want to appear.
"As a reminder, selecting to 'hide' an object from your timeline or friendship page does not remove it from Facebook, and the object may show up in other places such as news feed. If you would like to remove a story you posted from Facebook altogether, you can do so by selecting delete post or untagging yourself from photos."

Oct 10, 2012

Samsung to announce Galaxy Mini S3 tomorrow

Samsung is expected to announce the mini version of its best mobile phone, Galaxy S3 tomorrow Thursday 11 October 2012.

It seems as if the mini version of Samsung S 3 will be announced tomorrow. This announcement is coming exactly a week before the rumored launch of the rival Apple iPad mini.

The Samsung Galaxy S3 is a 4.8-inch device, and does not fit well in pockets. A 4 inch phone-cum-tablet galaxy hence, sounded like a very good idea. The German branch of the South Korean company in the first week of this month announced that the S3 Mini is to be launched in Germany on 11 October. “Something small will be really big. Get ready for a little sensation”, it said in the invites for a event.

Many speculated this to be an announcement of the new Galaxy S3 Mini. The S3 Mini, was first rumored in August this year. It appears that the rumor was real said Engadget today. Mobile chief JK Shin said that the company believed there was demand "in Europe" for a cut down 4-inch version of the popular Smartphone, which would otherwise carry the same specs of the original.

Samsung will use the super Amoled glare-free screen the S3 mini for brilliant images as in its Galaxy S series. An infographic from IHS iSuppli teardown analysis this Tuesday revealed that display technology of Samsung Galaxy S3 is better than the Apple iPhone5 display technology. The latest version Galaxy S III from this Android leader also released TouchWiz Nature UX user interface. We can also expect the same user interface in the S3 mini version also.

The event will take place in Frankfurt, Germany.

Samsung Galaxy Music Smartphone

The Samsung Galaxy Music is out and boy is it a surprise!
The Galaxy Music is an extremely affordable Android handset coming with... a built-in pico projector.
Remember the Samsung Galaxy Beam?

The idea seems to be absolutely the same: the pico projector should be built in at the top of the device, but this time around it is not a 15-lumen VGA projector, but rather a 9-lumen WVGA one.

We are saying should as this just seems too good to be true. Samsung has listed the WVGA projector in the Galaxy Music’s specs, but there is not a single image from all the press photos of the projector itself.
We’d guess that Samsung would definitely want to advertize such a unique feature, but hopefully we’re wrong and this device does indeed come with projector it’s advertized to have.

The second focus of the Galaxy Music is its sound output. The handset has stereo speakers on the front with Sound Alive & SRS playback enhancements, along with support for music formats OGG and the lossless FLAC. There is also a dedicated music button for quick access to the music player.

 Apart from that, you’re looking at a design pretty similar to the one on the Galaxy Pocket. There are new colors, though, and the screen has grown larger to 3.0 inches and it features QVGA resolution.

The Samsung Galaxy Music sports a 3-megapixel rear fixed-focus camera and has 4GB of internal storage expandable with microSD cards of up to 32GB. There is Wi-Fi b/g/n and 3G connectivity, as well as Bluetooth 3.0, so overall this seems like a very, very solid addition to the Samsung lineup.

The device will be offered in a dual-SIM version, the Samsung Galaxy Music Duos, as it has become customary with Samsung’s low end devices. If the projector turns out to be a fully functional one, this would be a huge surprise and a breakthrough in low end Androids. Stay tuned for the final confirmation.

Sep 12, 2012

APPLE iPHONE 5 REVIEWS

The Apple iPhone 5 is finally here, with the latest arrival boasting a 16:9, 4 inch screen, new port, thinner, lighter design and 4G LTE.

Last year's iPhone 4S always felt like an incremental upgrade rather than a true step change, and although it sold wonderfully for Apple and brought some interesting additions, few would argue against the suggestion that it opened the door for competitors.

As a result, this year's launch was perhaps most important for Apple since the very first iPhone arrived back in 2007.

For anyone following the rumours over the past year, the iPhone 5 will not bring any major surprises, with many of the new features expected – including the new dimensions and the improved A6 chip.

The camera is smaller, hardier and enhanced by the more powerful chip, and the front facing camera is bumped up to a 720p version. WiFi is improved and the inclusion of 4G is a must have in the current phone world.



But it is the size, design and shape that will win the most admiring glances. The all glass and aluminium chassis can claim to be the thinnest smartphone at 7.6 mm 'thin'.

The 4 inch screen keeps the retina resolution despite the added length, which Apple has brought in to make the phone more movie-friendly.

The added real-estate is welcome, especially given the growth of its rivals, and apps will apparently be easy to move onto the new screen size for developers.

In the hand the iPhone 5 certainly feels comfortable. You can see why Apple decided to keep the width the same as it fits the hand nicely – just as its predecessors have.



The added length could have made the phone unwieldy, but the loss of thickness ensures that it maintains its balance and premium feel.

Those people who have got used to the iPhone 4 and 4S will certainly notice the difference that the design brings. It served to make the device more modern feeling, and the materials used keep that premium feel that Apple has put so much stock in.


Thinner, lighter and more screen were always on the cards, and the fans' desires are understandable.

The aluminium backplate feels lovely – just textured enough to feel very different from its predecessors and, to our taste, preferable to the glass.



The screen is bright and colourful, although it's difficult to truly appreciate the small upgrade that Apple has made in the bright lights of the show room.

The camera is also more difficult to test properly, but it certainly seemed faster to take a photo, something that can be a frustration on older iPhones.


From a software perspective, iOS 6 brings with it a wealth of new features that will certainly make a major difference to not only the way the iPhone 5 feels, but also its predecessors the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S when they get the updated software.

Maps, for instance, are significantly altered after Apple ended its longstanding agreement to use Google Maps and pushed forward with its own offering, in conjunction with sat nav giant TomTom.

The new maps certainly look the part, with some beautiful 3D renders and snazzy looking new vector graphics, although we would like to really take some time to tell you just how well the new offering performs in the wild.

The showcased flyover mode was great for the riverside of London, but at you would expect fell flat pretty quickly as you left the tourist districts and got to residential areas.

Early indications elsewhere are good, however, as the Apple designed tag is pushed to the fore. The tilt and rotate view functionality looks gorgeous and the turn-by-turn navigation is likely to attract plaudits with a simple and intuitive interface.

Siri has been given a major, and frankly much-needed, overhaul with the voice 'companion' functionality extended into new languages and new territories in an attempt to turn the iPhone 4S' overhyped and under-featured personal assistant up to a useful level.

It coped better with the noise of the press room than its predecessor – presumably due to the new microphone set up in the new device, and could answer the two or three stock questions we asked it.

Given the obsession with Facebook, the need for better integration was a key addition for Apple in its latest OS, and the iPhone 5 and its older brothers will benefit from a major overhaul of the way in which the social network links up with your handset.

The Facebook (and Twitter) functionality feels much more central to the experience this time around, and having the ability to post form the notifications screen feels like an obvious inclusion that works well.

Sep 9, 2012

Taliban posing as Hot Chicks in Facebook profiles.

Australian defense analysts are briefing their troops to be careful on Facebook because the Taliban is using pictures of cute girls to lure Ausies, and Coalition Forces, into giving up secrets.

A Defence Analysis called "Review of Social Media And Defense," which is based almost solely on a patchwork of American Defense Department information, had this to say:
Fake profiles – media personnel and enemies create fake profiles to gather information.
For example, the Taliban have used pictures of attractive women as the front of their Facebook profiles and have befriended soldiers.
Kind of interesting to lump "media personnel" in there along with enemies. The analysis said troops have an "overt reliance" on privacy settings, and often don't screen people looking to "make friends" online. Taliban often pose as high school friends or "attractive women," gaining a "back door" into profiles that would otherwise be protected.

Officials also warn about photos:
In the survey carried out for this review, the cadets mostly focused on the following points to
protect against risks:

• No identifiable photos of bad behavior.
• Pictures in uniform only if behaving appropriately.
• No photos with guns, Rambo-style.
• No negative references to ADFA or Defence.

So the Defence force doesn't mind bad behaviour, as long as it's not identifiable on Facebook? Rambo-style photography?

Photos can be a problem though, especially due to smart phones and "geotagging" - a process which embeds location information inside the photo. A security expert told The Herald Sun, an Australian online publication, that geo-tag information "can be data-mined and sold to anybody."

Recent growth in infrastructure in Afghanistan, such as the use of WiFi, has provided a new dimension for the Taliban to conduct warfare. In a lot of ways, the Coalition Forces have been behind the Taliban. Until recently, many units advised their troops to just stay off of social media.

Now, militaries across the globe have accepted social media, and include it in their regular readiness briefs.

Sep 8, 2012

Facebook officially acquires Instagram


NEW YORK -- Facebook has closed its purchase of Instagram, the wildly popular photo-sharing app that it agreed to buy before its initial public stock offering in May.

The deal was valued at $1 billion when the companies agreed to it in April. But Facebook's stock price has lost half of its value since its IPO. With Facebook trading at $18.06 on Aug. 31 when the deal closed, it is worth about $715.3 million, $300 million of it in cash and the rest in stock.

Even at the lower price, Instagram is by far Facebook's largest acquisition and the only one that Facebook has promised to keep going, rather than shutting it down.

"Instagram will continue to serve its community, and we will help Instagram continue to grow by using Facebook's strong engineering team and infrastructure," said Mike Schroepfer, vice president of engineering at Facebook Inc., in a blog post. Facebook is also hiring Instagram's dozen or so employees and said it will work with them to help improve its own mobile applications.

Instagram has a fast-growing and loyal user base of iPhone and Android users who take photos and apply various filters to them to share. Unlike Facebook, which was created with computers in mind, Instagram exists only as a mobile application.

Sep 6, 2012

Top liked Facebook pages September 2012

Entertainment continues to dominate the list of most popular Facebook pages.

After Facebook’s own pages for its mobile app and main company page, the most Liked pages are those of entertainers, athletes, TV shows, games, and a few international brands.

The following table shows page name and total likes of top liked pages as of September 1, 2012.

1.
Facebook for Every Phone
132 215 969
2.
Facebook
71 959 688
3.
Texas HoldEm Poker
64 949 096
4.
YouTube
62 504 174
5.
Eminem
60 928 726
6.
Rihanna
60 167 811
7.
The Simpsons
54 573 212
8.
Shakira
54 335 171
9.
Lady Gaga
53 234 912
10.
Michael Jackson
51 731 391
11.
Coca-Cola
50 154 288
12.
Harry Potter
49 970 595
13.
Cristiano Ronaldo
48 235 457
14.
Family Guy
48 068 369
15.
Justin Bieber
46 442 110
16.
Katy Perry
46 159 114
17.
Linkin Park
44 882 352
18.
AKON
41 789 216
19.
South Park
41 787 027
20.
Music
40 480 110
21.
Lil Wayne
40 327 815
22.
Bob Marley
40 109 354
23.
Beyoncé
38 476 660
24.
FarmVille
38 267 725
25.
Disney
38 195 981
26.
Leonel Messi
38 037 274
27.
MTV
36 796 052
28.
SpongeBob SquarePants
36 792 246
29.
Megan Fox
36 449 950
30.
Avril Lavigne
35 570 559
31.
The Twilight Saga
35 040 828
32.
FC Barcelona
34 894 968
33.
David Guetta
34 868 274
34.
Will Smith
34 721 359
35.
Vin Diesel
34 526 975
36.
Black Eyed Peas
34 313 321
37.
Taylor Swift
34 313 095
38.
Adam Sandler
33 891 944
39.
Adele
33 860 141
40.
Selena Gomez
33 538 032
41.
Avatar
33 537 141
42.
Usher
33 102 227
43.
Converse
32 979 026
44.
Starbucks
31 837 706
45.
Real Madrid C.F.
31 510 408
46.
Toy Story
29 871 116
47.
Red Bull
29 671 495
48.
Enrique Iglesias
29 567 418
49.
Shrek
29 329 152
50.
The Beatles
29 094 202

Sep 5, 2012

Mark Zuckerberg not to sell facebook stock for a year

Mark Zuckerberg has said that he will not sell any of his shares in Facebook for at least one year in a bid to shore up investor confidence.

His pledge came as Facebook shares hit an all-time low of $17.55 on Tuesday.

There have been fears that as various lock-up periods, which stop sales by early investors, end, the stock may dip further.

Mr Zuckerberg owns about 444 million shares of Facebook plus an option to issue another 60 million.

Last month, Peter Thiel, a venture capitalist and one of Facebook's earliest backers sold 20.1 million shares, cashing in most of his stake in the firm, after the first lock-up period ended.

Facebook shares rose nearly 2% in after-hours trading post the announcement.

Growth concerns
Facebook shares have fallen almost 50% since the company went public in May this year.

Analysts and investors have been concerned about the firm's ability to generate revenue from users that access the website on their mobile devices.

The decreased screen space on these devices, compared with traditional desktop computers, means it is difficult to place advertisements.

As more and more users access the site from mobile devices, there are fears that revenue growth from advertisers, may slow.

That dose not bode well for Facebook, as advertising revenue is one of the biggest contributors to its income.

Those fears were fanned further on Tuesday after analysts at Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase cut their price targets for the firm's shares.

Scott Devitt of Morgan Stanley lowered his target price to $32 from $38 on concerns over mobile advertising.

Meanwhile, Doug Anmuth of JPMorgan Chase slashed his target to $30 from $45, saying that revenue from games hosted on the website was likely to fall.

Muslims network Salamworld aims to be facebook rival

At the International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM), in the country's capital Kuala Lumpur, Russian student Jeyhun Jaafar posts a video on a social network.

A comment pops up in Turkish - a language Mr Jaafar does not speak. But he is able to respond with the help of a translate button on the page.

This is one of the ways the new social network, called Salamworld, hopes to make it easier to connect Muslims around the world.

In Malaysia, Muslims make up the majority of the population of 29 million people, about 60% of whom are internet users.

Besides this South East Asian country, a trial version of Salamworld is currently being tested by about 1,000 users in Bosnia-Hercegovina, Turkey, Egypt and Indonesia.

The company aims to launch globally by November.

At first glance, Salamworld may not seem much different from other social networks.

With a blue and white layout and features such as a wall to post comments, photos and videos, it is similar to what networking giant Facebook used to look like when it first launched.


About 1,000 Muslims around the world are testing Salamworld
But supporters of the multilingual and multicultural project say one thing will be different - content.

Salamworld aims to create a safe space for Muslims - free from things such as pornography, gambling and anything else that may be against Islamic principles.

For instance, Prof Nuraihan Mat Daud of IIUM, who uses Western social networking sites as a teaching tool, says she is uncomfortable with advertisements that show women in revealing clothing.

Although Facebook is tough on pornography, it sports a number of gambling apps - including one called Bingo Friendzy that allows UK users aged 18 and over to play games for real-money prizes.

Local rules
It is not the first attempt to create a Muslim-tailored social network, but so far none has become popular on a large scale.

Finland-based Muxlim.com came out in 2006, but is currently shut down. Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood launched Ikhwanbook.com in 2010 but the site is also currently offline.

Critics say that these networks tended to appeal only to their respective regions.

Salamworld, based in Turkey but with advisers from more than a dozen countries, hopes to be different.

One way it aims to achieve the goal of uniting Muslims globally is by using a three-level content-filtering feature.

It will allow authorities to set content guidelines based on different interpretations of Islam, which vary from country to country. For example, a picture of a Muslim woman who is not wearing a hijab may be fine in secular Indonesia but not acceptable in Saudi Arabia.


Salamworld wants to rival Facebook and other Western social networks
It is not clear how internet users will react to such censorship - in Malaysia, for instance, attempts to control the web have been met with fierce opposition.

Earlier this month, politicians and activists staged an internet blackout day to protest against changes in the law they say aimed to stifle free speech online.

Some Malaysians, however, say they will tolerate a certain degree of censorship, such as filtering out photos of skimpy outfits or alcohol ads, which are against Islamic values.

"But if they are censoring things for political reasons, like to prevent us from seeing the real situation in Syria or the violence committed against Muslims in Burma, then that is not OK," says another student, Abdul Hadi bin Haji.

'Alternative needed'
Even if Muslims around the world do start using Salamworld en masse, it may still be tricky to rival Facebook, say analysts.

According to internet information company Alexa, the social networking giant is the most popular site in all the countries where Salamworld is conducting its trials.

In Malaysia, for example, many say it is at times easier to connect with friends through Facebook than by calling them.

It doesn't worry Salamworld's head of Asia-Pacific operations Salam Suleymanov, who strongly believes in a need for an alternative.

"When we talk about 1.5 billion Muslims, maybe those who support my view make up a very small percentage - but it's still a big number," he says.

Sep 4, 2012

Apple Confirms iPhone 5 launch on 12 September 2012


Apple has sent out invitations for an event to be held on September 12 in San Francisco, where the long-awaited "iPhone 5" will likely be unveiled.
After weeks of speculation and leaks, Apple confirmed that it would indeed be introducing some new products on Wednesday, September 12th. The new iPhone is highly suspected to be the star of the event, and the rumorsphere says to expect a redesigned device -- taller, thinner, with a 4.0-inch screen (up from 3.5 inches) and equipped with 4G LTE capability.
Here's the event invitation, via TechCrunch's Peter Ha on Twitter; in the rendered shadow of the invite's graphics, you can make out the number 5, a play on the fact that tech writers and bloggers have been calling this device the "iPhone 5" for about 18 months:

Sep 1, 2012

CHANGE YOUR RELATIONSHIP STATUS

1. Go to https://www.facebook.com

2. Log in with your username and password.

3. Go to your profile by clicking on your name on upper right corner.



4. Once on your Timeline, click on Update Info button.



5. Scroll down to find Basic Info box,and click edit.

6. Find Relationship Status section,and select desired one from drop-down box.



7. If you are changing your Relationship Status to one that includes option to select person with who it's going on,type that friend's name, or leave it blank.

8. Click Save button at lower right corner.

Then You are done, click like if this helped you

IMPROVEMENTS TO FACEBOOK

A Like that doesn't come from someone truly interested in connecting with a Page benefits no one. Real identity, for both users and brands on Facebook, is important to not only Facebook’s mission of helping the world share, but also the need for people and customers to authentically connect to the Pages they care about. When a Page and fan connect on Facebook, we want to ensure that connection involves a real person interested in hearing from a specific Page and engaging with that brand’s content. As such, we have recently increased our automated efforts to remove Likes on Pages that may have been gained by means that violate our Facebook Terms.



On average, less than 1% of Likes on any given Page will be removed, providing they and their affiliates have been abiding by our terms. These newly improved automated efforts will remove those Likes gained by malware, compromised accounts, deceived users, or purchased bulk Likes. While we have always had dedicated protections against each of these threats on Facebook, these improved systems have been specifically configured to identify and take action against suspicious Likes.



To be clear, we do not and have never permitted the purchase or sale of Facebook Likes as we only want people connecting to the Pages and brands with whom they have chosen to connect. Beyond the need to maintain authentic relationships on Facebook, these third-party vendors often attempt to use malware or other forms of deception to generate fraudulent Likes, which is harmful to all users and the internet as a whole.



These improvements to our site integrity systems benefit both users and brands alike. Users will continue to connect to the Pages and Profiles they authentically want to subscribe to, and Pages will have a more accurate measurement of fan count and demographics. This improvement will allow Pages to produce ever more relevant and interesting content, and brands will see an increase in the true engagement around their content.



To help protect yourself in the future, please be aware of suspicious links and visit www.facebook.com/hacked if you have any reason to believe that your account may be compromised. We also highly recommend that Page owners vet any business that offers marketing services to build your Facebook presence, to make sure that these companies are using only legitimate practices, which do not violate the Facebook Terms.



Facebook was built on the principle of real identity and we want this same authenticity to extend to Pages. We undoubtedly expect that this will be a positive change for anyone using Facebook, and we look forward to helping even more people share and connect with the friends and brands they care about.

REMOVING FACEBOOK TIMELINE

BEFORE YOU CONTINUE READING, KEEP IN MIND THAT THERE IS NO ANY MEANS OF REMOVING OR DELETING TIMELINE ONCE YOU SWITCH TO USE TIMELINE, THE EXISTING METHODS OF USING BROWSER PLUGINS AVAILABLE HAVE NOTHING TO DO ABOUT YOUR FACEBOOK TIMELINE RATHER THAN CHANGING THE WAY WEBPAGES ARE DISPLAYED BY YOUR BROWSER AND THE SAID "TIMELINE" WILL BE SEEN BY ONLY YOU, NOT YOUR FRIENDS (BE CARE OF THESE SCAMS)
The Facebook timeline has not been well received by many. When it first rolled out it was often buggy, often jumping back up when attempting to scroll down, and the most recent posts being displayed to the left and right which many users found unintuitive. It was perhaps inevitable that users were going to be bombarded with claims that they could revert back to the older profile design.

Facebook Timeline

But is it possible to remove the timeline? And go back to the older Facebook design.
The answer depends very much on what you’re looking for and how you interpret the question.
The question we usually receive from our readers is “can you remove the timeline?”. The key word in this question is remove. In this case the answer is no. You cannot remove the timeline. There is no option in the Facebook settings to do that so don’t bother looking. No website, Facebook page, application or anything can remove the timeline. It represents the latest phase in the evolution that is the Facebook experience and Zuckerberg isn’t planning on leaving anyone behind.

Perhaps the more appropriate question you are looking for is can I hide the Facebook timeline from myself, in which case the answer changes to the affirmative.
What we mean by this is that there are options available to a user that lets them alter the way their Internet browser (IE, Firefox, Chrome for example) displays a webpage. These come in the form of browser extensions, which are small programs that “plugin” to your browser that enable it to do things it couldn’t normally do. Browser extensions are powerful tools that can essentially do anything when it comes to displaying a webpage. Since the timelines introduction a handful of popular extensions have come into the limelight, namely FBPurity, TimelineRemove or SocialFixer. HOWEVER these extensions only affect the way your browser on your computer displays a webpage. You haven’t removed the timeline, you’ve just hidden it from yourself. You still have the timeline, but your Internet browser is just masking it from you. It only works for the computer you’re on and the Internet browser you installed the extension on. Anyone visiting your profile will still see the timeline, unless they too have an extension installed.

Fake Timeline From FBPurity

From FBPurity’s Facebook page, a screenshot of the extension at work. Note the single column format.
Whilst the specific extensions we mentioned above have been around for some time now and appear legitimate it is worth noting that installing browser extensions should not be taken lightly because they can be potentially dangerous and are perfectly capable of installing malware onto a computer amongst other unwanted activities. It is for this reason that we implored our readers not to install the browser extensions that rogue Facebook applications were directing to recently that claimed to remove the timeline. These extensions could have potentially harboured malicious code that could have done any number of malevolent activities on your computer.

If you really want to hide the Facebook timeline from yourself, the ONLY way of doing this is by installing a legitimate browser extension designed to do just that (yes you can get your browser to act like a REALLY old unsupported browser but this is certainly not recommended because this will just be insanely buggy). Generally speaking we don’t really recommend doing it for a number of reasons. For one these extensions are not supported at all by Facebook meaning they may be buggy especially when Facebook updates itself. In fact Facebook doesn’t like these extensions at all (they recently blocked all links to FBPuritys website) especially when you consider many of these extensions are hiding Facebook advertisements – mess with Facebook’s revenue stream and they’re not going to be happy.

So there you have it. You can’t remove the timeline but you can get your computer to hide it from you. So if you really hate the timeline that much then head over to the websites we linked to above – they support all the major browsers. Don’t try and remove the timeline any other way though, because there are plenty of scams out there using timeline removal as bait to lure victims into falling for any number of dangerous scams.

Aug 26, 2012

HOW TO HIDE FRIENDS ON FACEBOOK

Facebook is the number one social website in the world on which millions of people visit each day. They look out for people. They send friend request to whom they know, check out profiles of people. Specially profiles of friends friend using the friend list. Sometimes few of my friends ask "Who is that guy in your friend list, he just sent me a friend request?" You also may have faced such situations one one of your friends sends a request to one of your friends using your friend list.

It's all about privacy. To avoid such situations, Facebook has given extreme privacy control option to everyone so that nothing from their profile can be misused. Fact, 90% of people don't know how to hide their friend list if I just ask now. Because they let it open for everyone and they don't ponder over such possibility. Using the steps below, you can set the friend list option to yourself, to friends, public and custom.

Here are the steps to hide or Limit the friend list view on your Facebook Profile:
  1. Log in to Facebook.
  2. Now Go to Your Profile.
  3. Now Click on Friends.
  4. A Windows opens showing all your friends on Facebook.
  5. Now, Look at the above right hand corner of friends window. You will an EDIT Option.
  6. Click on the Edit Option. 
  7. This Edit Option provides you the options like Friend list Visible to : Me, Friends friend, Public and Custom.
  8. Select Me.
  9. Once you select, no body will be able to see your friend list.
Hide or Remove you Facebook Friend List

 Drawbacks:
  • Nobody can suggest you friends.
  • The Call option from your profile will also become invisible.
However, I recommend to set it to friends only so that your friends can view your friends. Hope this will help you in hiding or disabling your friend list.

If you like the Post Please Share it With your Friends.

Jul 28, 2012

DELETE FACEBOOK PERMANENTLY

Do you wish to completely delete your facebook account?
If the answer is yes, then you can do it for only one step.
But wait, why do you want to delete your account permanently?

Instead of completely delete your account, you can deactivate it so that next time if you change your mind and decide to use facebook again, you can activate it again.

To deactivate your account follow the instructions that I posted in this blog in the link:

http://facebooknotes.blogspot.com/2012/07/temporally-deactivate-facebook-account.html

But if you have multiple account, or you want to completely delete your facebook account, you can do the following:

1. First Log in to the account that you want to delete:

2. Second, Click the Following Link:


Permanently Delete My Facebook Account


Then you will be prompted with the massage as shown in the following screenshot:


By clicking    DELETE MY ACCOUNT   button, and follow the next few instructions, you will completely be removed from facebook.

The choice is yours.

TEMPORALLY DEACTIVATE FACEBOOK

Want to deactivate your account on Facebook? This guide will show you how to do it.

Once you have logged in to Facebook, open the Account menu on the top right of the page, and then select the option “Account Settings,” where shown by the red arrows in the next image:

Once you have done that, in the left hand menu, click on the Security option, which is the one indicated in the next image:
Then, near the bottom of the screen, click on the “Deactivate your account” link:
To complete the deactivation you will have to choose your reason for leaving from a list of options and then click on the Confirm button. This will open a pop up box asking for your password: Enter it and click on the Confirm button. Finally, you will be asked to read a captcha text and enter it. Do so and click on the Submit button. This will lead you to Facebook's home page, where you will see a message confirming that your account has been deactivated.

Deactivation allows users to make their whole account invisible for temporary reasons and to recover all their information when they return, including their “list of friends” and their photos, just as it was before they left. To recover all their stuff they just have to log in again after 24 hours have passed since the deactivation.

Jul 7, 2012

COOL FACEBOOK EMOTICONS

Image or Face:                  Name of  the  Face                     Text to type
Heart

<3

Robot

:|]

Penguin

<(")

Shark

(^^^)

Chris Putnam

:putnam:

Pacman

:v

Curly Lips

:3

Grumpy

>:(

Confused

o.O

Squint

-_-

Kiki

^_^

Kiss

:*

Angel

O:)

Devil

3:)

Cry

:'(

Unsure

:/

Upset

>:O

Sunglasses

8|

Glasses

8)

Wink

;)

Gasp

:O

Grin

:D

Tongue

:p

Sad

:(

Smile

:)


Forty-two

LIKE

:42:

(y)

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