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Facebook Now Has 750 Million Users

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Facebook’s incredible worldwide growth has reached another major milestone: the service now has 750 million monthly active users, according to a source close to the company.

Techcrunch reached out to Facebook for confirmation, and a company spokesperson responded that they don’t have anything to announce at this time. That isn’t surprising: the company hasn’t officially released an updated user count since it reached 500 million users nearly a year ago. Facebook has obviously been growing since then — we believe the company may be waiting until it hits the 1 billion mark before officially updating the stat again.

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Facebook’s ‘Project Spartan’ To Take On Apple

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Following a leak Wednesday about a possible upcoming photo-sharing app for Facebook, TechCrunch claims that Facebook’s next big endeavor, internally known as “Project Spartan,” will establish a new mobile web app platform that could help the social networking giant gain independence from Apple’s App Store.

Unnamed sources told TechCrunch that Facebook’s new platform will be HTML5-based and will be compatible only with Apple’s mobile Safari browser (at first). This means that when the platform launches, its entire customer base will be iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users.

“As of right now, there are believed to be 80 or so outside developers working with Facebook on Project Spartan,” writes TechCrunch, listing FarmVille developer Zynga among the partners. “These teams are working on apps for the platform that range from games to news-reading apps.”

If the sources are correct, Facebook’s platform will sidestep Apple’s App Store and create a mobile marketplace all its own. Users will also be able to download and access apps directly from Facebook’s platform.

“Forget the buggy Facebook app,” Gizmodo says of the project. “iPhone owners could use a mobile version of Facebook that is lean, mean and outside the reach of Apple’s control. [...] Here’s something to think about if this rumor pans out. Adobe Flash is gone, Apple is gone and everything will be channeled through Facebook. Kinda scary, huh?”

Looking toward Facebook’s financial goals, Techland writes, “If [Facebook] can get enough people using an iOS-optimized website, it can use that to sell them stuff too. It can sell apps that work within its web platform (as opposed to apps that have to approved by Apple first).”

Some, however, think Facebook might not be headed in the right direction. Gigaom, for example, writes,

Farmville, and many other social games that use in-game currency to make most of their money, have already found a profitable route to mobile thanks to Apple’s App Store. A Facebook offering might immediately appeal to some of these developers [...], but to prove a viable alternative in the long run, Facebook will have to either offer a better value proposition to devs (by giving them a bigger cut) or show that developers can reach more users than they do with native offerings. [...] For a store that resides entirely on the web, that’s a tall order, because it means convincing mobile users to shift their idea of what constitutes mobile software once again. It’s hard to understate how different it is to ask mobile users to pay for an application, versus asking them to pay for access to what basically amounts to a website.

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Facebook Is Taking A Special Interest In RockMelt’s Social Browser

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Ever since RockMelt launched its social browser, it’s been known unofficially as the Facebook browser. Facebook chat, status updates and sharing are all built right into the browser. Now Facebook and RockMelt are officially working together in a product partnership, and the first fruits of that collaboration can be seen in the latest release available today, RockMelt 3.

RockMelt is still an independent browser with only a few hundred thousand active users. Facebook made no investment in RockMelt, nor is it going to help promote or distribute the browser, at least initially. Its product teams, however, are working closely with RockMelt to make sure that its Facebook features shine. “The partnership is based on a shared belief that social should join navigation and search as fundamental capabilities of the browser,” says RockMelt CEO Eric Vishria.

There are several new features in RockMelt 3. To start with, RockMelt 3 adds Moves your Facebook buddy list from the left edge to the right edge of the browser. The buddy list is now scrollable, and it can be expanded to view not just pictures of your friends’ faces, but their full names.

The second new feature is that Facebook notifications, messages, and friend requests—what Facebook engineers internally call “the jewels”—are now visible at the top of RockMelt right in the chrome itself. You can visually see when you have a new notification, friend request, or message, and pop down a window to read more.

RockMelt is now integrated with Facebook’s unified messaging system. So if a contact is online, a chat window pops open. If he or she is not, it reverts to Facebook messages.

RockMelt also knows when you are on Facebook.com, and strips away the redundant features from the site which are part of the browser. So the notification counters at the top pf Facebook disappear because they are now a feature of RockMelt. And when you are on Facebook.com, and a friend wants to chat, RockMelt’s version of Facebook chat opens up instead of two chat windows duplicating each other, which is what happened before.

So far, RockMelt has not taken off as much as its initial launch hype would have suggested. Since it opened up its beta to the public in March, it’s seen modest growth, but high user engagement. A Facebook endorsement could help its cause.

So did Marc Andreessen, who is both a Facebook and RockMelt board member, have anything to do with this partnership? Not initially. “Someone on Zuck’s staff was an alpha user—one of our first 100 users—he showed it to Zuck and that is what got the partnership going,” Vishria tells me.

Certainly, it is not too difficult to imagine why Facebook would be interested in supporting the development of a social browser.

Source :- http://techcrunch.com

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Dad walks in on Daughter Facebook clickjacking attack helps scammers earn money

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Once again, scammers are running rings about Facebook‘s built-in security measures by spreading a clickjacking scam between users’ accounts.

The latest attack poses as a link to a video of a dad walking in on his daughter.

Dad walks in on daughter.. embarrassing!

Dad walks in on Daughter.. EMBARRASSING!
[LINK]
This really must have been an awkward moment.

We’ve seen scams which use language like this before, of course, and sometimes they’ve been used to trick you into installing software onto your computer.

Interestingly, on this occasion, the image used in the messages is the same as that used in the recent “Baby born amazing effect” scam which has spread with similar ferocity in the last couple of weeks on the social network.

Clicking on this latest link takes users to a webpage, where it looks as though you need to press the “Play” icon to watch the video.

Dad walks in on daughter video

However, clicking the icon secretly tells Facebook that you “Like” the page (via the use of a clickjacking exploit), helping the scam to perpetuate.

Dad walks in on daughter survey

It will be no surprise at all to regular Naked Security readers that the scam is designed to drive traffic to online surveys – which earns commission for the scammers behind the attack.

When I tried it, the surveys claimed that I could receive a free iPad or MacBook or even a flat-screen television.

Dad walks in on daughter survey

If you’ve been hit by a scam like this, remove the messages and likes from your Facebook page – and warn your friends not to click on the offending links. Clearly there’s much more work which needs to be done by Facebook to prevent these sorts of messages spreading so rapidly.

Source :- http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com

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Rapper Soulja Boy blames Facebook hackers for racist, homophobic rant

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Here are plenty of people in the public eye who have claimed over the years that their social networking accounts have been compromised by hackers: Lil Wayne, Britney Spears, Kim Kardashian, Lil’ Kim, Britney Spears (again) and most recently – of course – Anthony Weiner.

Some of these people may even have been telling the truth (although not US Congressman Weiner, who’s now admitted he sent inappropriate photographs via Twitter to women who weren’t his pregnant wife, and acknowledged he was lying when he blamed it on a hacker).

The latest apparent celebrity victim of social networking hackers is Atlanta rapper Soulja Boy. On Sunday his Facebook page exploded with a torrent of abuse apparently directed people who had “Like”d his page, but then posted messages expressing their dislike for the star.

Here’s a small part of what was posted on the rapper’s Facebook page:

how can you say "i hate you" blah blah blah. when you are on my page that doesnt make any sense! it sounds crazy you are stalking a person who you dont like WTF kinda s*** is that.

Fans i'm sorry you had to read this. but we must take a stand. they WILL not treat us like this any longer. I dont give a f***.

I'm gonna keep talking s*** to these white f****ts until they unlike my page. f***ing weirdo stalkers!

Soulja Boy has now told celebrity news website TMZ that he did not post the messages, and that hackers stole login credentials belonging to his page’s administrators.

"I wanted to clear the air and let everyone know that my Facebook got hacked."

"I had administrators on my account that no longer work with me. The hackers used these old accounts to post hateful messages. This was not done by me or anyone on my team and I'm upset that I am being labeled as a racist and homophobic person."

Thank goodness that’s all sorted then. It would, after all, be very hard to imagine that a rapper would use such incendiary language – not their style at all..

Source :- http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com

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Myspace Has Just One Bidder

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The tragic tale of once successful Myspace may finally come to an end.

According to All Things Digital, an investing group including Activision Chairman Bobby Kotick is in final talks to take over the site. ATD adds that Myspace owner NewsCorp is likely to hold onto about 20 percent of the site.

However, sources close to the deal also warned that it has not yet been finalized and could still fall apart.

News Corp paid $580 million for Myspace back in 2005, but the site has tanked since Facebook‘s rise, even with an attempted makeover into an entertainment hub. Recent numbers have shown traffic in steep decline.

Still, the most current reports said that News Corp was hoping to get at least $100 million by selling off the Myspace. Sources indicate that these numbers will not be met.

Since News Corp announced that the site was open for takeover, companies including Vevo, Zynga, and a few others were rumored to have been interested. These deals have not worked out, according to ATD.

Source -: http://www.huffingtonpost.com

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