Facebook: We Send 60 Million People to Other Mobile Apps Every Month

facebook-mobile-app-600

When Facebook filed for its IPO earlier this month, it revealed that it has 425 million mobile users. That massive presence on phones and tablets has translated into success for many others, the social network says, since Facebook’s mobile platform sends more than 60 million people to third-party apps every month.

In a post on the company’s developer blog, Facebook’s head of mobile developer relations, James Pearce, says that since Facebook revamped its mobile platform in October last year (which included the launch of its iPad app), it’s resulted in a big uptick of users interacting with apps and games outside of Facebook proper. The 60 million people who visit apps from Facebook create more than 320 million “visits” on those apps.

While many of those visits are to popular games such as those made by Zynga, Pearce cites the social app Foodspotting as an example of an app success story. By letting users sign in with their Facebook login and creating an app that integrate’s with Facebook’s Open Graph, Pearce says Foodspotting has seen the number of visits and activities shared via the social network increase by a factor of three.

As a more recent example, Yahoo built Open Graph into its desktop and mobile web apps, so visitors could see on Facebook which Yahoo News articles their friends had been reading. Since Feb. 14 — not even two weeks ago — traffic to the mobile Yahoo News web app has gone up by 3.5x.

SEE ALSO: Facebook’s Road to IPO

The post comes right before Facebook appeared at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. There, Facebook Chief Technology Officer Bret Taylor said the company is working to help create standards to make developing web apps easier. That would help fuel Facebook’s mobile influence even more, since developers wouldn’t need to create separate apps for every platform (iOS, Android, etc.) and just integrate Open Graph with a web app to reach Facebook’s huge audience.

Of course, the one thing Facebook hasn’t yet revealed is how it’s going to tie advertising to its mobile platform. In Facebook’s IPO filing, the company said it didn’t serve ads through any of its mobile products — yet.

What do you think of Facebook’s growing influence in mobile? Is it a boon to developers, or should they be wary of putting so many eggs in the Facebook basket? Tell us what you think in the comments.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, ymgerman


BONUS: Facebook IPO: Reading Between the Lines



Advertising: 123




As we learned by reading the S1 document, Facebook relies heavily on advertising for revenue. “Advertising” comes up 123 times, matched only by “Mobile” (also with 123 mentions). Interestingly, Facebook is not really making much money from mobile but still considers it a key component for future development.

Click here to view this gallery.

More About: apps, Facebook, Mobile, Open Graph, trending

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Facebook Talks About Social Games and Mobile Apps for 2012

facebook mobile

Facebook revealed its roadmap for social games and mobile apps for the rest of the year at the Inside Social Apps 2012 conference on Wednesday in San Francisco — and it’s good news for app developers.

Want to create an app for Facebook’s Open Graph? The mobile space presents a huge opportunity to create cross-platform social games, said Carl Sjogreen, director of product management at Facebook, who spoke to a packed conference center filled with IT insiders about Facebook’s projections for the mobile social gaming and app space for this year.

“You sort of had to have a PhD in Facebook to build an app on Facebook,” he said. Now, with the new Open Graph he said they want to encourage people to create cross-platform social apps.

“If you are building a social application….it’s really important to think about cross-platform,” he said.

Social apps are not as straightforward as creating an iOS or Android app. If you have an app that doesn’t allow you to play with friends who have different devices, that problems trumps any visual features lost by creating a cross-platform device. Social applications need to be inherently cross-platform.

What users want, he says, is to create a dynamic Facebook timeline that tells their story — whether that means they’re sharing the games they play, vacation photos or their favorite recipes.

“For the platform to be complete, we need to have all of that,” he said. “We have millions of people playing games on Facebook every day and that’s an important part of their experience.”

The moderator, AJ Glasser of InsideNetwork, asked Sjogreen about Facebook’s vision for how the API should work 12 months from now. Sjogreen said he’d like to create a better experience with games on the Open Graph, without interruptions and many opportunities to share.

“I think the potential for games is really huge,” he said. “We want to help every user find an app that makes sense for them.”

Pinterest has been one of the most successful apps recently launched through timeline integration.

Facebook’s mobile web platform launched a late last year. This allowed users to access apps integrated with Facebook while on their mobile devices, in addition to desktop computers.

“It took all applications that made the web platform so appealing and made them available on mobile,” Sjogreen said.

More than half of Facebook users access the site on their mobile devices. There are already 60 million active users who engage with mobile apps on Facebook per month.

Late January, Mashable’s Pete Cashmore talked to Facebook’s Vice President of Partnerships Dan Rose to discuss Facebook’s ultimate goal behind all of the recent integrations with various apps, games and web tools. Rose said Facebook wants to be a “social graph” for all of its users.

Would you like Facebook to be a one-stop-shop for what everyone is doing on the web? Are you an app developer creating a mobile app for Facebook’s Open Graph? What are your thoughts on this? What do you think about Facebook’s plans for the future of social gaming and mobile? Tell us in the comments.

More About: 2012, apps, Facebook, Open Graph, timeline, trending

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7 Big Privacy Concerns for New Facebook and the Open Graph


It’s not always clear how Facebook apps interact with the data you share on the social network. Are they allowed to broadcast it? Sell it? Compile it in a way that you never intended?

“When you turn all Platform applications off, your User ID is no longer given to applications, even when your friends use those applications,” says a portion of Facebook’s privacy policy. “But you will no longer be able to use any games, applications or websites through Facebook.

Simply, should you choose not to share with apps at all, they are taken away from you. If you want to use some, but limit their functionality, you have to carefully customize your privacy settings in order to ensure your information is used appropriately. With the Open Graph, which can push any information to your Facebook page without explicit permission each time, it becomes more of an imperative.

Here are seven things you may not realize that Facebook knows, and is using to interact with your friends or advertisers. Concerned about what you share on the social network? Be sure to check the Apps You Use in the Privacy Tab to ensure that you have full control of your privacy in a way that makes you feel comfortable.


1. Where You’ve Been


You’ve always kept your location up to date on Facebook, ensuring everyone knows when you change cities — but you’re not interested in geotagging. Watch out, because your exact location can still be picked up by Facebook and broadcasted.

One of the more prominent design features in Facebook’s new Timeline is the “Maps” feature, which gathers the meta data from a user’s location and prominently displays check-ins, life events, photos, and the like on the map. The issue is, for those who aren’t necessarily keen on sharing discrete location details, this feature is virtually unavoidable. According to Facebook’s privacy policy: “We receive data from the computer, mobile phone or other device you use to access Facebook. This may include your IP address, location, the type of browser you use, or the pages you visit.” This data is collected every time, even when a friend of yours has GPS turned on and tags you in a picture she’s uploading from her mobile phone.

Even if you’re stringent about your whereabouts not making it to a highly visible plane, Facebook has already gathered data from you retroactively, ensuring that every time you’ve changed your city location — or listed your home town– it will show up on the map as well.


2. What You’re Listening To


You just downloaded Spotify and you’re really excited to get started. You signed up and were asked to link to Facebook before launching the app, so you clicked the boxes and everything seems ready. But don’t click play on that MC Hammer track just yet…

Since September, Spotify has required that new users sign in through Facebook, thanks to a partnership forged after the music giant hit the U.S. Essentially, anytime a regular Spotify user turns on the app and clicks play, whether via desktop or through mobile, the app can beam information right into Facebook and broadcast it to friends without prior notice. In response to major backlash, Spotify now includes a “Private Listening” mode, which blocks sharing immediately to Facebook. However, it will turn off after a restart or an extended period of time.

The only way to circumvent the compulsory posting is to turn it off permanently in both places. Spotify’s desktop app does have a “turn off publishing to Facebook” within its settings, but the only way to ensure posting does not occur is to revoke Spotify’s publishing abilities within Facebook apps.


3. When You’re Creeping


That girl you met at the event you went to last week. Your ex from college. Your worst enemy from middle school. Odds are, they’re all on Facebook, and you can’t resist the urge to creep. Just remember that Facebook is watching, too.

Naturally, anything you do on Facebook is seen and gathered by Facebook, and creeping on people is no exception. Facebook specifically tracks all clicks done within its platform in order to better tailor an experience for the user. Do you ever wonder why certain people show up in your feed, while others are hardly ever reported on? That’s your creeping doing its work. Visit your frenemy’s page enough times, and he or she will end up gracing your feed more often than you may like.

Don’t worry, Facebook does not specifically share this data with other users, though it will assume that this person is important in your life. Marking someone as a VIP can lead to their appearances more often in your advertisements or apps in addition to the extra face time on the feed.


4. Where You Run


Social running is all the rage these days, and you’re ready to load up your iPhone with RunKeeper, connect it to Facebook and get to stepping. But there’s more, and it has to do with that sneaky little GPS…

Runkeeper is one of the poster children for Facebook’s new “frictionless” user experience. A social network for avid (and aspiring) runners, Runkeeper packs sophisticated technology usually reserved for GPS watches and other athletic gear into a handy iPhone application and has the option of linking material to Facebook. Except, with the Open Graph, linking gives companies an opportunity to simply push all of the info that they collect into a user’s Timeline. And in this case, that means valuable GPS data.

Say that you go on a run with Runkeeper around the park. The GPS data routes the run you made and then pushes it to Facebook so your friends can see where you’ve been and for how long. This may not be much of a problem for you, but what if one day you forget to turn off Runkeeper and go to work? Anywhere you go from that point on is at risk of becoming common knowledge among your social circle, which can be unnerving at best and dangerous at worst. Runkeeper does a great service for those motivated for fitness, but in participating in the Open Graph, the information is fair game.


5. Your Saturday Night Plans


Your local bar is having a comedy night, and you have to RSVP on Facebook to get on the guest list. But when you click “Attending,” your plans can be broadcast to your social network — whether you realize it or not.

One of the trickier features of Facebook is the “sponsored stories” section, which is a particular form of advertising. Companies can sponsor particular Facebook actions, called “stories,” that double as advertising for a brand. However, this also means that your information could be used as an advertisement for another brand.

“Sponsored Stories” are a possibility every time you like a brand or location or respond positively to a public event. When you do this, companies can tap into your friends and let them know that you like or are attending an event — with the hopes of getting them involved, too. Liking a brand or attending its event automatically makes your information available for brand ambassadorship, and you can become an advocate for the event or the brand without implicitly signing up.


6. When You’ve Slacked on Your Diet


You have a Fitbit and you’re ready to get your connected fitness in gear. You allow your account to connect with Facebook so you can broadcast your successes to friends and family, but the Open Graph does change things.

Fitbit is not currently on Facebook’s list of fully-adopted Open Graph apps, but its potential (and partnership with Runkeeper) can create quite an issue for users who are concerned about privacy. The nuances of Facebook’s Open Graph mean that everything is done for the user as soon as permission is granted, rather than approving every singular action within an app. Combine that with an app that already makes those decisions for you, and the possibility of sharing information you actually don’t want to share is high.

The key issue with Fitbit is that it already uploads very personal information automatically whenever the portable device is near its connected docking station. Combined with Open Graph, data could be broadcasted to friends without even logging into Facebook.


7. What News Articles You Just Read


A friend read an article that catches your eye through the Washington Post Social Reader. You click on the title and realize that the app requires permission before linking to the article. You may think little of it and click through to the article, but Facebook watches as you keep reading.

The main news app that has adopted Facebook’s Open Graph structure is the Washington Post Social Reader. You may have already seen the app in your News Feed, highlighting some articles read by friends that could be of interest to you. However, if you’re interested in one of the articles, you’re going to have to allow the app to access your personal information.

That can be an inconvenience for some, but the real issue lies after you read that first article. Because of the app’s structure, you aren’t prompted whether you want to share a particular article with your peers. So, once you begin clicking around the Post’s website, all of your articles become fair game for posting onto someone else’s mini-feed. The result is, from that point forward, even without accessing the app directly through Facebook, your connection to your reading habits is already cemented and anyone can access it.

More About: apps, Facebook, facebook open graph, features, mashable, Open Graph, privacy, trending

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Frictionless Sharing: 10 New Facebook Apps to Get You Started


Facebook announced more than 60 new partnerships last Thursday, all of which yielded apps that can be integrated into your Timeline. We’ve already seen the early results of select partnerships — including Spotify, The Washington Post and Foursquare. Now, Facebook is taking the Open Graph and Gestures platforms a step further.

Open Graph is one among many big announcements Facebook has made since the f8 conference in September, so it can get a little confusing. To help you transition with all the new changes, it boils down to this:

  • Facebook is pushing Timeline to all users. Basically, Timeline is your new profile, whether you want it or not. It will roll out within the next few weeks.
  • Open Graph is a developer platform that allows you to customize your Timeline with select apps. It incorporates “frictionless” sharing, which posts your online activity (e.g. what you’re listening to or reading) directly to your profile without the need of a “like” or “share” button. Many are concerned that this is oversharing or infringing on privacy, but like all other content you already share on your profile, you are in control of what gets shared and what doesn’t.

SEE ALSO: Facebook Timeline Roll Out: Everything You Need to Know

To get your feet wet, here are a few apps that were introduced in the partnership that you can take for a spin now.

Have you found any of the new apps useful or fun? Let us know what you think in the comments.


1. Fab.com




Fab.com has integrated social shopping features with Facebook Timeline. You can add your purchases on Fab.com to your Timeline, and you can also opt to have your Fab username present or hidden. If you don't want every purchase shared on your Timeline, you can filter specific categories, such as gifts or adult purchases, so that they don't appear on your profile.

Image courtesy of Flickr, cloud_nine

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More About: apps, Facebook, features, Open Graph, timeline, trending

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Facebook’s Big Announcement [LIVEBLOG]


The time has come for another Facebook launch event, and we’re here to cover it live. Rumor has it that the social network will be launching more apps based on the Open Graph and Gestures — that is, apps that let you “verb” any “noun” (read a book, hike a trail, ride a bike and so on.)

SEE MORE: Facebook Announces Tight Integration of 60 Apps to Timeline

The event starts at 5pm Pacific Time, 8pm Eastern — and we’ll be here to chat and answer questions a half-hour beforehand. Stay tuned!

More About: Facebook, Open Graph, trending

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Facebook to Introduce New Open Graph Apps, Gestures Wednesday [REPORT]


Facebook will introduce apps based on its new Open Graph and Gestures platforms at an event Wednesday in San Francisco, according to a report.

The apps will let users “frictionlessly” share based on actions other than “like,” “read” or “watch,” according to AllThingsD, which cites “sources” in the report.

Reps from Facebook could not be reached for comment.

Facebook announced the upgrade to Open Graph at the f8 conference in San Francisco in September. The move was prompted by Facebook’s assertion that the Like button constrained sharing because it was an implicit endorsement of content. Facebook wants users to share everything they are doing, whether it’s watching a show or hiking a trail, so the company decided to create a way to “express lightweight activity.”

Since then, apps from Hulu, Spotify and The Washington Post have been based on the “read” and “watch” buttons. Now, Facebook plans to unveil a group of apps that use Gestures beyond those, according to the report.


The New Open Graph


Facebook’s introduction of the new Open Graph in September did more than just expand the range of Gestures available to app developers. The new platform is also different in three major ways compared to the old Open Graph, including:

  • Apps no longer have to ask for permission to post content to Facebook over and over again. Instead, a new Facebook permissions screen explains exactly what type of stories will be shared the first time you give an app permission to post to your Facebook. Once completed, it will no longer have to ask for permission.
  • Updates through the new Open Graph appear in the ticker automatically, but do not appear in the News Feed unless it’s an important event. This makes it easy to discover new content from your friends in real time.
  • Users can share experiences, such as listening to music, through the new Facebook Open Graph and the ticker.
  • What do you think? Are you looking forward to new apps based on a range of Actions? Let us know in the comments.

    Image courtesy of Flickr, Ralph Paglia

    More About: apps, Facebook, Open Graph, trending

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Facebook Users Shared Their Songs 1.5 Billion Times in 6 Weeks [STATS]

Music Apps That Have Integrated Facebook's Open Graph

Music discovery services such as Spotify, Rdio, Mog, Slacker and Earbits are attracting significantly more users since Facebook‘s f8 Developers Conference.

Now that music apps are on the Open Graph — and appear in the ticker — Facebook users have shared their listening activity more than 1.5 billion times with their friends, says Facebook’s Casey Maloney Rosales Muller in a blog post published Tuesday.

“Developers have started to demonstrate that when music is discovered through friends, people listen to more music and a wider variety of artists,” he writes. “Our hypothesis was that integrating with the Open Graph would accelerate music discovery and make it a more valuable part of the Facebook experience, while improving key metrics for our partners.”

Those key metrics indeed improved, with some music developers seeing active users on their services more than double:

  • Spotify: Four million people have joined Spotify since Sept. 22. The service became available in the U.S. on July 14.
  • MOG: Mog saw a 246% growth Facebook users since f8.
  • Rdio: Facebook has increased Rdio’s new user registrations 30-fold.
  • Slacker: Available across mobile, TV, auto and web, Slacker saw a more than 11x increase in monthly active users in the month following f8.
  • Earbits: This Y Combinator-funded startup experienced a 1,350% increase in the number of users becoming fans of the band they’re listening to.

Other integrated music sites include Rhapsody, Soundcloud, Vevo, Songza, iHeartRadio and AudioVroom.

Facebook anticipates growth for its music partners to continue to increase after it rolls out Timeline to the masses. Only a limited amount of Facebook users have enabled Timeline for the official public launch.

SEE ALSO: 5 Most Popular Musicians to Subscribe to on Facebook

“We’re getting closer to a wider roll-out of Timeline and the Open Graph, and we are looking forward to the mobile and web experiences that are being created across all industries,” Rosales Muller says. “What we’ve seen in music and games on Facebook is just the start, and it all happens through the apps you build.”

To learn more about the Open Graph, which is still in beta, click here.


BONUS: How Spotify’s App Looks on Facebook



Spotify Hearts Facebook




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More About: Ear Bits, Entertainment, Facebook, MOG, Music, Open Graph, rdio, Slacker, Social Media, spotify

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Should the New Facebook Gestures Allow a Dislike Button?


Mashable OP-ED: This post reflects the opinions of the author and not necessarily those of Mashable as a publication.

Peter VanRysdam is the CMO of web design company 352 Media Group and the author of Marketing in a Web 2.0 World. Connect with him on Twitter @Peter352.

Lost in all the announcements about Timeline and frictionless experiences at Facebook’s F8 conference in September was a change to the Open Graph that had developers salivating.

Instead of being restricted to simply “liking” a page or post, Facebook announced you could “verb any noun.” That means you can “watch” a movie, “cook” a recipe or “hike” a trail. Developers can dictate those terms, creating custom user experiences for their sites. However there is one caveat.

Many developers saw this as the green light to create a “dislike” button on Facebook, a much debated add-on that millions of users are petitioning for via various Facebook groups. However, those hopes are quickly dashed during the Open Graph development process, when developers who typed “dislike” received this message:

Name is Blocked. This name uses one or more blocked words.

Other words like “loathe” and “doesn’t like” aren’t on the blocked list, leading you to infer “dislike” was specifically excluded, presumably along with a laundry list of profanities. But why would Facebook block what at least a vocal minority are clamoring for? And the better question is, should they?

SEE ALSO: How to Time Your Facebook Posts to Reach the Most Fans

I used to be a supporter of adding the “dislike” button right next to “like.” Many blogs and sites like YouTube employ a “thumbs up/down” graphic alongside every video or comment. However in learning more about the issue and the potential ramifications, I’ve been convinced otherwise.

For Facebook, it comes down to money. The site has built a platform that is without a doubt the most targeted marketing tool for brands of all sizes. Where else can you target potential customers down to their specific interests, age, sex and zip code? Sure, dissatisfied users can post negative comments on a brand’s page, but that company has complete control to moderate and address those issues.

A “dislike” button has entirely different implications. Rather than encouraging people to “like” its own page, a company could promote the link to “dislike” its competition. There is nothing illegal about this type of hostile environment, but it is not business friendly. Remember that advertisers are the ones funding your beloved social network.

The arguments in favor of a “dislike” button are reasonable enough; however, they don’t outweigh the potentially disastrous negatives. Users understandably don’t feel comfortable “liking” a status update about a friend’s dog being put to sleep, but they may want to click a “dislike” button in order to be alerted of other comments on that post. The easy solution is to simply comment on the post with your condolences. If you’re concerned enough to want to stay in the loop, you should be concerned enough to post your sympathies. Consider the flip side, with people able to “dislike” your wedding photos or the announcement of your new nephew. Granted, as my mother would say, those people aren’t your real friends, but the opportunity for cyber-bullying is a far bigger concern than the need to subscribe to posts.

While I’m against a Facebook sanctioned “dislike” button on every post for the reasons above, I don’t agree that developers should be prohibited from making their own. I could see a group like PETA creating an app on its page that lets you dislike the concept of clubbing of baby seals, much like a petition. But they shouldn’t be able to elicit people to dislike a specific company. Users have a variety of other ways to express their concerns with those they disagree with.

There are legitimate uses for a “dislike” button, but putting them on every page is unnecessary — and it’s asking for trouble. Facebook knows better than to bite the hand that feeds it, and as an advertiser on the platform, I have to agree.

What do you think? Should there be a button on every page? Should developers be allowed to create one, or should Facebook continue on its current path?

More About: contributor, dislike button, Facebook, features, Open Graph, Opinion, Social Media

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How to Enable the New Facebook Timeline NOW


You’ve been hearing about all the wonderful new Facebook features, and like us, you’re probably super-eager to get started with them.

If you’re willing to go through a series of eight steps, you can get into the brand-new Facebook Timeline right now.

Simply follow the instructions in our gallery below, and suddenly you’ll be basking in a new world of Facebook goodness, just like the developers are. Follow the instructions carefully, and good luck.

Please note: If you haven’t already verified your Facebook account with either a mobile phone number or credit card number, you’ll be asked to do so before you can try the new features. If you need more help with that, here’s a helpful link.

First, you’ll need to go to the Facebook developer page, which is a part of your Facebook account. Make sure you’re logged into your Facebook account, and then simply follow this link to get started.

Update: When will we be able to opt into the Timeline without the need for going through these developers’ steps? Says Stefan Parker, Facebook UI Engineer on Quora, “We are aiming to start letting users opt into Timeline in the next two to four weeks. There is no set date though.”


Step 1




1. When you get here, click "allow."


Step 2




2. Click "create new app"


Step 3




3. Name it whatever you want, and give it whatever namespace you'd like -- it doesn't matter. Click the checkbox "I agree to the platform privacy policy." And then click Continue, pass the security check by filling in the Captcha, and you'll be ready for the next step.


Step 4




4. After you've verified yourself as a human, you'll reach this screen, where you'll need to click "Open Graph" on the left side.


Step 5




5. You'll see the next screen, entitled "Get Started with Open Graph" -- fill in anything you want (it doesn't matter) in those fields under the heading "start by defining one action than one object for your app." Click Get Started.


Step 6




6. On this screen, do nothing except scroll to the bottom and click "Save Changes and Next." Do the same thing on the next screen.


Step 7




7. You'll be taken to this screen. Wait a few minutes, and then go to your Facebook homepage. That's where you'll be invited to enable Timeline. Be patient at this point -- sometimes it requires you to wait before the changes take effect.


Step 8




8. When you go back to your Facebook homepage, you'll see this. Success! Click Get It Now, and you're in!


You've Done It!




Here's where you fiddle with your timeline, set it up the way you like it, and when you click Publish Now, your Timeline goes live. Or, you can wait two to four weeks (there is no set date), and you can opt in without going through this process. If you want to get into your timeline from another computer, the address for this developer's version is located at this URL: http://www.facebook.com/[yourusername]?sk=timeline and of course [yourusername] is your own Facebook user name.

[via CNET]


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More About: Facebook, How-To, Open Graph, timeline

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Facebook Open Graph Seeks to Deliver Real-Time Serendipity


Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has just unveiled the new Facebook Open Graph and Facebook Gestures.

At the f8 conference in San Francisco, Zuckerberg unveiled the company’s plan to extend connections and sharing to the next level. As we reported earlier, Facebook felt constrained by the Like button because it was an implicit endorsement of content. Facebook wants users to share everything they are doing, whether it’s watching a show or hiking a trail, so it decided to create a way to “express lightweight activity.”

“Today we’re making it possible to create a whole new class of apps and change industries at the same time,” Zuckerberg stated.

To that end, Facebook is launching a new Open Graph for developers to build apps that allow users to share whatever they are doing without overwhelming their friends. It has three key components:

- Apps no longer have to ask for permission to post content to Facebook over and over again. Instead, a new Facebook permissions screen explains exactly what type of stories will be shared the first time you give an app permission to post to your Facebook. Once completed, it will no longer have to ask for permission

- Updates through the new Open Graph appear in the ticker automatically, but do not appear in the News Feed unless it’s an important event. This makes it easy to discover new content from your friends in real time.

- Users can share experiences, such as listening to music, through the new Facebok Open Graph and the ticker.

Facebook divided the types of apps that will be built on its platform into four buckets: Communication, Games, Media and Lifestyle.


F8 2011



Andy Samberg and Mark Zuckerberg





Beast's Facebook Page





Ben Parr and Jennifer Van Grove





F8 programing team





Zuck Dog





Beast





Before f8 Keynote





"I'm not really friends with these people"





Andy Samberg





Andy Samberg





Timeline Mobile





Mark's Timeline





Mark Zuckerberg





A View of Timeline from the Audience




Courtesy of Robyn Peterson


Mark with Timeline





Zuckerberg's Cover





Timeline





Timeline





Timeline





"Any Verb, Any Noun"





Reed Hastings





Reed Hastings





Spotify CEO Daniel Ek





Spotify CEO Daniel Ek





Watch Netflix and Hulu from Facebook





Nike+





Mark Zuckerberg and Words With Friends





Washington Post Social Reader





Running and Eating





Brett Taylor





Brett Taylor





Chris Cox





Chris Cox





Facebook Memories





Mark Zuckerberg Closes F8





Mark Zuckerberg Closes F8





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