Tag: facebook (Page 5 of 8)

100 million Facebook pages leaked to torrent sites

Facebook Confidential.This isn’t quite as bad as it seems, but it does give you a sense of what’s possible with all of the data on Facebook. A hacker named Ron Bowes from Skull Security wrote a crawler to compile data from all the publicly available pages on Facebook. Publicly available – that’s important.

It’s also important, though, that such a crawler could be written to grab that kind of data. Though you could just as easily search for these people and get their info, I’m not entirely comfortable with the idea that a bot could be written to compile the same. Facebook security remains a shifting target – for most people, there’s not a lot on Facebook they don’t want people to see. As Facebook continues to grow and expand its profitable operations, there could potentially be more and more truly personal data involved. In fact, that’s how Zuckerberg would prefer things. That’s why this is important.

I’ve been thinking about kicking Facebook for a while, and every time I get a story like this, even as unalarming and completely benign as this story is, it points to the ongoing lack of attention and concern it seems Facebook gives to user data.

Google drops $100 million in Zynga

Zynga.Everyone knows Farmville as a Facebook phenomenon, but the people at Zynga are getting to know it as a cash cow. The Facebook game has gotten so much attention that Google has decided to invest more than $100 million in Zynga, supposedly in preparation for the launch of Google Games.

Can Zynga really stand as the cornerstone for Google’s Games operation? Absolutely. The company is projected at $350 million in revenue for the first half of 2010, half of which is actual operating profit. Total profit for 2011 is expected to be over a billion dollars. A billion, people. With a “b.”

Here’s TechCrunch on why Zynga is so important for Google:

Zynga continues to work on high level strategic business development deals. The reason these deals are so attractive to companies like Yahoo and now Google is this – Zynga allows them to rebuild the massive social graph, currently controlled by Facebook. For whatever reason people love to play these games and get passionately addicted to them, coming back day after day. That’s helped Facebook become what it is today. Google, Yahoo and others want some of that magic to rub off on them, too.

Who knew a silly social game could make such a huge impact.

There’s a Facebook script to see who deleted you

QQ please.There are a lot of things I really loathe about Facebook. While it is a good place to connect and share things with my actual friends, there’s always the strange undercurrent of lurkers – people I haven’t seen or talked to in as much as a decade trying to keep up with me by watching status updates and the like.

One such person sent me an invitation to look at a page on Facebook titled “Find out who deleted you.” This may have been around for awhile, but that doesn’t make it any less ridiculous. If you need a script to tell you when you’ve been removed from a “friend’s” page, you probably shouldn’t have friended them in the first place. And what do you plan to do now that you know? Rage at them? Send them a nasty note? Track them down?

As great as all of our tools for connectivity are, there is a threshold of overconnect for me.

Even Mark Zuckerberg had to start somewhere

Zuckerberg's early coding.I saw this post at TechCrunch and just had to pass it along. I often wonder where people like Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg get their start. Were they just born to be badass coders or was their some kind of natural progression toward their newfound demigod status. It turns out the second is true, for Zuckerberg at least.

A TechCrunch reader who was also one of Zuckerberg’s classmates at Exeter offered up a site that Mark had written back in 2001 when he was just 16 years old. It’s…terrible. Awful. Even in 2001 it would have been way behind its time.

Check out the full post over on TechCrunch.

More Facebook privacy issues surface

surprise!This weekend Zuckerberg sat down with Michael Arrington to talk Facebook privacy. I found Zuckerberg’s comments pretty disconcerting, even more so today after an anonymous employee gave an interview to The Rumpus.

The most interesting was when the employee admitted to a master password for every account, one that used to be ‘Chuck Norris’ spelled with letters, numbers, and symbols. Now, the password only worked from inside Facebook offices, but I can’t imagine a scenario under which an employee would need to actually log in to the site as anyone else. Wouldn’t there be internal diagnostic tools for viewing that information? A database viewer perhaps?

There’s also the fact that Facebook logs all of the information pertaining to your usage. That allows it to implement handy features like remembering whose site you visit most so it appears at the top of your searches. But that’s not all that gets logged. There’s also all of the information you’ve ever entered, including the stuff that you’ve deleted.

I hate to sound like a fear monger, but I think it’s important for people to be aware of how much information is held on Facebook’s servers and how many people have access to that information. It’s more than I thought, on both accounts.

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