Difference between revisions of "Facebook"

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(Facebook Features)
(Facebook Features)
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===Messaging===
 
===Messaging===
 
Facebook allows its users to send messages to each other through an inbox function. It is similar to the chat application, except the message appears in an inbox instead in a chat pop-up window. As with Facebook chat, messaging allows for the sending of group messages that can accumulate in a thread.
 
Facebook allows its users to send messages to each other through an inbox function. It is similar to the chat application, except the message appears in an inbox instead in a chat pop-up window. As with Facebook chat, messaging allows for the sending of group messages that can accumulate in a thread.
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===Groups===
 +
Facebook allows its users to form groups, that can be accessed via the sidebar. Users can post comments, messages, links, videos and photos to the group. Privacy settings allow users to control which people have access to the group and which people are able to post to the group. Users can belong to up to 300 different groups. People use groups for school clubs, groups of friends, class projects, or any other small community that people want to connect with.
  
 
== Ethical concerns surrounding Facebook ==
 
== Ethical concerns surrounding Facebook ==

Revision as of 21:54, 6 December 2011

Facebook logo

Facebook is a revolutionary social-networking site founded in 2004. Facebook users share their identity - to a certain extent their sense of self - and personal information with their online social network through their Profile.

History

Mark Zuckerberg developed a site called Facemash while he was an undergraduate at Harvard. The site displayed four photos of Harvard university students, two males and two females, and prompted the user to vote on which out of each pair was "hotter." [1] As Zuckerberg retreived these photos from a protected University database, he faced legal and academic repercussions.

Zuckerman's next online social venture, thefacebook.com, was launched in February of 2004. Cameron Winklevoss, Tyler Winklevoss, and Divya Narendra accused Zuckerberg of misleading them, as he had agreed to help them build a similar website, Harvard Connection. The website immediately took off, with almost half of Harvard students registering for the site within the first month it was active. One month later, Zuckerberg expanded registration to Columbia, Stanford, and Yale, with most other colleges and universities coming shortly after that. In 2005, Zuckerberg dropped the "the" from the name, making it simply facebook.com. In September 2005, registration became open to all high school students, requiring an invitation to join. Facebook kept expanding, until September 2006 when it was opened up to anyone over the age of thirteen with a valid email address. Facebook is now planning their IPO, scheduled to come out by 2013.

Facebook Features

Overview

Through user Profiles, users are able to share their photos, interests, and personal information to their social network. Users are able to communicate to each other by posting publicly on ‘friends’ walls, sending private messages to other users and chatting with ‘friends’ through Facebook chat or messages. Recently Facebook introduced two new features: Timeline and Frictionless Sharing. Timeline will modify the user profile to focus on more significant events and span a longer period of time than it currently does. Frictionless sharing integrates third-party products with Facebook, and shares information between them. For example, connecting Spotify to Facebook lets you see your friends' playlists within Spotify, and posts the songs that you've listened to on Facebook.

Chat

Facebook chat is very similar to other instant messaging platforms, such as AIM, MSN Messenger, or G-Chat. Users are able to chat one-on-one with others, or form chat groups with multiple users. As long as both users are logged onto Facebook, they are able to interact and chat. Mobile applications have recently been developed that allow Facebook to forward their messages to users' mobile devices, even if they are not directly logged onto Facebook. Recently, Facebook teamed up with the video chat service Skype to allow users to video chat through Facebook.

Friending

Friending is the act of connecting with someone through Facebook. Users can search for people they want to connect with, get recommended by other friends, or have Facebook suggest friends for them. After someone requests to connect with another, the user must accept them as a friend. They are also given the option to put the friend into a category, such as a family member. If the user does not want to connect with the requester, they are able to hide the request. Once you are friends with someone, you are able to remove them, or de-friend them. Facebook also allows users to block people from accessing certain aspects of their profile, or preventing them from showing up in a search for their name.

Liking

Facebook allows its users to "like" certain aspects of a users profile, such as status updates, photos, wall posts, or new friend connections. The more people like something, the greater chance it has of showing up in other users' news feeds. There are also Like pages, which can range from topics of interest to places to people to ideas. Users' liked pages will show up in their profile under interests. Many companies have embedded "like buttons" on their own corporate pages, allowing people to like them on Facebook easily and quickly.

Messaging

Facebook allows its users to send messages to each other through an inbox function. It is similar to the chat application, except the message appears in an inbox instead in a chat pop-up window. As with Facebook chat, messaging allows for the sending of group messages that can accumulate in a thread.

Groups

Facebook allows its users to form groups, that can be accessed via the sidebar. Users can post comments, messages, links, videos and photos to the group. Privacy settings allow users to control which people have access to the group and which people are able to post to the group. Users can belong to up to 300 different groups. People use groups for school clubs, groups of friends, class projects, or any other small community that people want to connect with.

Ethical concerns surrounding Facebook

There are several ethical implications regarding Facebook’s use of user information.

Information Transparency

It is unclear how Facebook uses the information that they collect to provide personalized to individual users. Furthermore, it is unclear exactly what information Facebook is collecting. Do they keep track of every single time a user logs in or out.

Other Ethical Considerations

Everything that a user posts to Facebook is the property of the user, but with regard to intellectual property, the user gives Facebook a “non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use any IP content that you post on or in connection with Facebook” [2]. While a user owns the information, Facebook is able to mine that information in order to offer personalized advertisements to users, and generate revenue from users' personal information. Several applications such as Spotify require that a user have a Facebook account in order to use that application. Such requirements don’t give users a choice and to a certain extent monopolize the Facebook platform.

Federal Trade Commission

On November 29, 2011, Facebook and the Federal Trade Commission came to an agreement regarding the protocol of protecting users' rights to privacy. The settlement addressed concerns that Facebook was not upholding "the promises about privacy that it makes to its hundreds of millions of users."[3]

Complaints[3]

  • In December 2009, Facebook changed its website so certain information that users may have designated as private – such as their Friends List – was made public. They didn't warn users that this change was coming, or get their approval in advance.
  • Facebook represented that third-party apps that users' installed would have access only to user information that they needed to operate. In fact, the apps could access nearly all of users' personal data – data the apps didn't need.
  • Facebook told users they could restrict sharing of data to limited audiences – for example with "Friends Only." In fact, selecting "Friends Only" did not prevent their information from being shared with third-party applications their friends used.
  • Facebook had a "Verified Apps" program & claimed it certified the security of participating apps. It didn't.
  • Facebook promised users that it would not share their personal information with advertisers. It did.
  • Facebook claimed that when users deactivated or deleted their accounts, their photos and videos would be inaccessible. But Facebook allowed access to the content, even after users had deactivated or deleted their accounts.
  • Facebook claimed that it complied with the U.S.- EU Safe Harbor Framework that governs data transfer between the U.S. and the European Union. It didn't.

Settlement[3]

Specifically, under the proposed settlement, Facebook is:
  • barred from making misrepresentations about the privacy or security of consumers' personal information;
  • required to obtain consumers' affirmative express consent before enacting changes that override their privacy preferences;
  • required to prevent anyone from accessing a user's material more than 30 days after the user has deleted his or her account;
  • required to establish and maintain a comprehensive privacy program designed to address privacy risks associated with the development and management of new and existing products and services, and to protect the privacy and confidentiality of consumers' information; and
  • required, within 180 days, and every two years after that for the next 20 years, to obtain independent, third-party audits certifying that it has a privacy program in place that meets or exceeds the requirements of the FTC order, and to ensure that the privacy of consumers' information is protected.

Facebook usage in the past years

Number of Facebook users from Dec. 2004 to Sept. 2011
Year Total Facebook Users In Millions
2004 1 million
2005 5.5 million
2006 12 million
2007 50 million
2008IPO 100 million
2009 250 million
2010 550 million
2011 800 million

See Also

References

  1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facemash#Facemash
  2. http://www.facebook.com/legal/terms
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2011/11/privacysettlement.shtm Federal Trade Commission