Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts

Friday, November 2, 2012

ANTI-OBAMA BENGHAZI MEME GETS CENSORED FOR ‘VIOLATING FACEBOOK


ANTI-OBAMA BENGHAZI MEME GETS CENSORED FOR ‘VIOLATING FACEBOOK’S STATEMENT OF RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES’


Posted on October 30, 2012 at 8:52pm by  Jason Howerton
Facebook reportedly took down an image, or a meme, posted by the Special Operations Speaks PAC (SOS) that was critical of President Barack Obama’s handling of the terrorist attack on the U.S. compound in Benghazi. You may have actually seen it before it was taken down — it had earned roughly 24,000 “likes.”
The meme, which can be seen below, shows both Obama and deceased al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden with the following message: “Obama called the SEALs and THEY got bin Laden. When the SEALs called Obama, THEY GOT DENIED.”
Anti Obama Benghazi Meme Gets Censored From Facebook
(Source: Breitbart.com)
It was first taken down and the account was issued a warning. The account was later suspended for 24 hours for defying the warning and re-posting the image — with the warning above it.
The message is based on reports that indicate CIA operatives in Benghazi were told to “stand down” rather than help after Americans on the ground in Libya attempted to call out for help. Reports also suggest that the White House situation room had access to a live feed of the chaos at the U.S. compound as well as real-time email updates from within State Department.
Breitbart.com’s Awr Hawkins reportedly spoke with Larry Ward, president of Political Media, Inc., the company responsible for the SOS Facebook account.
“We created and posted this meme on Saturday after news broke that Obama had known and denied SEALs the backup they requested,” Ward told Breitbart.com.
He continued: “Once the meme was up it garnered 30,000 shares, approx. 24,000 likes, and was read by hundreds of thousands of people — all within 24 hrs. On Sunday, I went into the SOS Facebook page to post something else and found a warning from Facebook that we had violated Facebook’s Statement of Rights and Responsibilities with our meme. So I copied the warning, put it on the meme as as caption, and re-posted the meme to the Facebook page.”
Anti Obama Benghazi Meme Gets Censored From Facebook
(source: Breitbart.com)
The re-posted meme was removed within 8 hours before Facebook suspended the SOS PAC’s account for 24 hours.
Is this a violation of free speech or did SOS violate Facebook policy?

Monday, April 9, 2012

Suspect in dismembering says he met woman on Facebook


URBANA, Ohio (AP) — A man suspected of stabbing, suffocating and dismembering his girlfriend told a newspaper that he met her through Facebook while looking for new friends and that he met two of his alleged accomplices at a library just three days before the killing.
Matthew Puccio, 25, is among five people charged in connection with the death of 21-year-old Jessica Rae Sacco, whose remains were found in the bathtub of their Urbana duplex apartment in late March, about a week after police believe she was killed. A couple from Fenton, Mich., and two people from Urbana are accused of failing to intervene in the killing and helping Puccio cut off or transport limbs that were dumped in southern Ohio and Kentucky, about 70 to 85 miles away.
In an interview, Puccio said he met Urbana residents Sharon Cook and Christopher Wright at a local library days before the killing, then contacted them afterward and was stunned that they helped him cover it up instead of calling the police, the Springfield News-Sun (http://bit.ly/HnNkaf ) reported Sunday.
"It shocked the hell out of me," Puccio said. "I figured they'd be the first to call the cops on me."
Puccio said he had met Sacco through Facebook while he was living in Texas. Puccio said Sacco provided support he needed after his former fiancée left him and took two of his children.
Puccio said he and Sacco argued often and that their relationship became more stressed because she didn't get along with Andrew Forney and his wife, the Michigan couple who began living at the home shortly after Puccio moved in last fall.
"They always argued, always fought, never got along with each other," Puccio said. "Jess would blow up at them for no reason. Then Jess would blow up at me for things they were doing."
Puccio said he grew up in Woodland, Calif., and had been friends with Forney for years because they attended school together and their families went to the same church. Puccio said he spent the later years of his youth moving between relatives' homes and group homes and sometimes got into trouble by fighting with other teens, even smashing one in the head with a bar stool.
His account of how he became acquainted with the others charged in the case contradicts information provided by police, who have said Puccio and Sacco recently met the Forneys online and that the group members were "loose friends."
It's tough to determine the accuracy of Puccio's comments because authorities haven't disclosed much about him or the case, the News-Sun reported.
Puccio has said Sacco begged him to kill her after he confronted her about text messages she'd sent saying she wanted him dead.
Friends of Sacco say they don't believe that. Amanda Erb, who attended high school with Sacco, described her as a sweet "goofball" with a good sense of humor who wouldn't hurt anyone.
Erb arranged a candlelight vigil Saturday attended by about 50 people, some of whom brought stuffed animals and wreaths for a makeshift memorial in front of the home where she was found.
Another court hearing in the case was scheduled for Tuesday.
The charges against Andrew Forney, 26, include abuse of a corpse, tampering with evidence, obstructing justice, failure to report a crime and possession of criminal tools. His wife, 25, is charged with obstructing justice, failure to report a crime, possession of criminal tools and complicity to tampering with evidence.
The counts against Wright, 37, include abuse of corpse, tampering with evidence, obstructing justice and failure to report a crime.
Cook, 25, is charged with failure to report a crime and other complicity charges.
Wright's attorney said he had not seen the News-Sun report and declined to comment Sunday. Messages were left Sunday for attorneys for Cook and the Forneys.
The Champaign County prosecutor also has declined to comment on details of the case. source:

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Legality of Employers Asking Job Applicants For Facebook Passwords Questioned


Legality of Employers Asking Job Applicants For Facebook Passwords Questioned


“Volunteering is coercion if you need a job,” Andrews said.
Neither Facebook nor Twitter responded to repeated requests for comment.
SEATTLE (AP) — When Justin Bassett interviewed for a new job, he expected the usual questions about experience and references. So he was astonished when the interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook username and password.

Bassett, a New York City statistician, had just finished answering a few character questions when the interviewer turned to her computer to search for his Facebook page. But she couldn’t see his private profile. She turned back and asked him to hand over his login information.

Bassett refused and withdrew his application, saying he didn’t want to work for a company that would seek such personal information. But as the job market steadily improves, other job candidates are confronting the same question from prospective employers, and some of them cannot afford to say no.

In their efforts to vet applicants, some companies and government agencies are going beyond merely glancing at a person’s social networking profiles and instead asking to log in as the user to have a look around.

“It’s akin to requiring someone’s house keys,” said Orin Kerr, a George Washington University law professor and former federal prosecutor who calls it “an egregious privacy violation.”

Questions have been raised about the legality of the practice, which is also the focus of proposed legislation in Illinois and Maryland that would forbid public agencies from asking for access to social networks.

Since the rise of social networking, it has become common for managers to review publically available Facebook profiles, Twitter accounts and other sites to learn more about job candidates. But many users, especially on Facebook, have their profiles set to private, making them available only to selected people or certain networks.

Companies that don’t ask for passwords have taken other steps — such as asking applicants to friend human resource managers or to log in to a company computer during an interview. Once employed, some workers have been required to sign non-disparagement agreements that ban them from talking negatively about an employer on social media.

Asking for a candidate’s password is more prevalent among public agencies, especially those seeking to fill law enforcement positions such as police officers or 911 dispatchers.

Back in 2010, Robert Collins was returning to his job as a security guard at the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services after taking a leave following his mother’s death. During a reinstatement interview, he was asked for his login and password, purportedly so the agency could check for any gang affiliations. He was stunned by the request but complied.

“I needed my job to feed my family. I had to,” he recalled,

After the ACLU complained about the practice, the agency amended its policy, asking instead for job applicants to log in during interviews.

“To me, that’s still invasive. I can appreciate the desire to learn more about the applicant, but it’s still a violation of people’s personal privacy,” said Collins, whose case inspired Maryland’s legislation.

Until last year, the city of Bozeman, Mont., had a long-standing policy of asking job applicants for passwords to their email addresses, social-networking websites and other online accounts.

And since 2006, the McLean County, Ill., sheriff’s office has been one of several Illinois sheriff’s departments that ask applicants to sign into social media sites to be screened.

Chief Deputy Rusty Thomas defended the practice, saying applicants have a right to refuse. But no one has ever done so. Thomas said that “speaks well of the people we have apply.”

When asked what sort of material would jeopardize job prospects, Thomas said “it depends on the situation” but could include “inappropriate pictures or relationships with people who are underage, illegal behavior.”

In Spotsylvania County, Va., the sheriff's department asks applicants to friend background investigators for jobs at the 911 dispatch center and for law enforcement positions.

“In the past, we’ve talked to friends and neighbors, but a lot of times we found that applicants interact more through social media sites than they do with real friends,” said Capt. Mike Harvey. “Their virtual friends will know more about them than a person living 30 yards away from them.”

Harvey said investigators look for any “derogatory” behavior that could damage the agency’s reputation.

E. Chandlee Bryan, a career coach and co-author of the book “The Twitter Job Search Guide,” said job seekers should always be aware of what’s on their social media sites and assume someone is going to look at it.

Bryan said she is troubled by companies asking for logins, but she feels it’s not a violation if an employer asks to see a Facebook profile through a friend request. And she’s not troubled by non-disparagement agreements.

“I think that when you work for a company, they are essentially supporting you in exchange for your work. I think if you’re dissatisfied, you should go to them and not on a social media site,” she said.

More companies are also using third-party applications to scour Facebook profiles, Bryan said. One app called BeKnown can sometimes access personal profiles, short of wall messages, if a job seeker allows it.

Sears is one of the companies using apps. An applicant has the option of logging into the Sears job site through Facebook by allowing a third-party application to draw information from the profile, such as friend lists.

Sears Holdings Inc. spokeswoman Kim Freely said using a Facebook profile to apply allows Sears to be updated on the applicant’s work history.

The company assumes “that people keep their social profiles updated to the minute, which allows us to consider them for other jobs in the future or for ones that they may not realize are available currently,” she said.

Giving out Facebook login information violates the social network’s terms of service. But those terms have no real legal weight, and experts say the legality of asking for such information remains murky.

The Department of Justice regards it as a federal crime to enter a social networking site in violation of the terms of service, but during recent congressional testimony, the agency said such violations would not be prosecuted.

But Lori Andrews, law professor at IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law specializing in Internet privacy, is concerned about the pressure placed on applicants, even if they voluntarily provide access to social sites.

“Volunteering is coercion if you need a job,” Andrews said.

Neither Facebook nor Twitter responded to repeated requests for comment.

In New York, Bassett considered himself lucky that he was able to turn down the consulting gig at a lobbying firm.

“I think asking for account login credentials is regressive,” he said. “If you need to put food on the table for your three kids, you can’t afford to stand up for your belief.”  source:

Friday, December 16, 2011

FARMVILLE GOES PUBLIC $10 per share


‘FarmVille’ creator Zynga seeks sweet harvest with initial public offering of $10 per share


NEW YORK — Zynga is poised to harvest some cold hard cash in its initial public offering. Who knew that selling virtual cows and digital corn on Facebook would create a $7 billion company?

The online game developer best known for “FarmVille” priced its initial public offering late Thursday at $10 per share.

That’s at the top of its expected range of $8.50 to $10, a sign that investors are eager to get a piece of the latest in a series of high-profile tech IPOs this year. Zynga is selling 100 million shares and giving its underwriters the right to buy another 15 million shares. The company stands to raise slightly more than $1 billion from the offering, before subtracting for expenses.

Thursday’s pricing gives San Francisco-based Zynga a market value of about $7 billion.

Zynga will begin trading Friday on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the ticker symbol “ZNGA.” That’s when “Main Street” investors will get a chance to buy the stock. The offering rounds out a busy week for IPOs, the likes of which the market hasn’t seen since before the 2008 financial meltdown.

Founded in 2007 and named after CEO Mark Pincus’ dog, Zynga Inc. follows online deals site Groupon Inc. and professional network LinkedIn Corp. in going public. A bevy of smaller Internet startups, such as reviews site Angie’s List Inc. and Pandora Media Inc., have also taken the plunge. They’re the soup, salad and appetizer to the main course: Facebook’s public debut, expected sometime after April. The social network could rake in as much as $10 billion.

Pincus and Zynga’s 2,300 employees have built a business charging small amounts of money — a few cents, sometimes a couple of dollars — for virtual items in online games. The games themselves free to play. These items range from crops in “Farmville” to buildings in “CityVille,” its most popular Facebook game. This so-called “free-to-play” business model assumes that most people won’t want to pay anything to build virtual castles in “CastleVille” or take down rival mob bosses in “Mafia Wars.”

But with a large enough player base and a few loyal spenders, Zynga was able to earn a net income of $90.6 million in 2010. Though not unheard of, it’s unusual for a tech startup to turn a profit before going public.

Zynga has been criticized for being too dependent on Facebook and its 800 million users. Facebook takes 30 percent cut from what people spend on outside applications through its site. In the July-September period, 93 percent of Zynga’s revenue was generated through the world’s largest online social network.

That said, there’s no denying that Facebook’s vast user base and widespread popularity are directly responsible for Zynga’s meteoric rise. As of Thursday, Zynga’s games had more than 223 million monthly users on Facebook. If those gamers could form their own nation, its population would be roughly on par with Indonesia and Brazil.

Zynga’s growth has also been helped by the simple fact that its games are addictive. Just last week, actor Alec Baldwin got booted off a plane because he wouldn’t stop playing “Words With Friends,” Zynga’s Scrabble-inspired mobile phone game. Zynga is focusing on mobile gaming as a way to expand beyond Facebook.



Meet the Zynga IPO Millionaires (and One Billionaire) Club

Imaginary tractors and millions of hours of wasted time has made a handful of Zynga insiders stinking rich. The maker of diversionary games such as “CityVille” and Alec Baldwin’s favorite “Words with Friends” just priced its IPO stock at $10 a share, valuing the company at roughly $7 billion.

Here is a peek at some members of the Zynga millionaires (and billionaires) club, based on the IPO price. Remember that Zynga’smost-senior executives and early investors largely are holding onto their shares rather than sell them to public investors. That means the value of their holdings are mostly on paper for now.

[More from WSJ.com:
L.A. Mansion: Over $80 Million]

Mark Pincus

Zynga's Mark Pincus

Put yourself in Mark Pincus’s shoes. You’re old enough to be Mark Zuckerberg’s dad, which makes you practically geriatric by tech startup standards. You’ve kicked around Silicon Valley for awhile, and watched riches rain on your peers. And now, tada! You’re a billionaire. Pincus’s stake in Zynga is valued at $1.1 billion. He’s not selling any shares in the IPO, and his special class of stock gives him a commanding 37.4% voting stake in the company he founded. Back in 2005, the successful-by-normal-human-standards Pincus declared to the New York Times Magazine: “I’m not A-list.” He is now.

Bing Gordon/Kleiner Perkins

Kleiner Perkins *was* the dotcom boom the last time around, with investments in Amazon.com, Netscape and (later) Google. The venture-capital firm remains a big dog in Silicon Valley, though it has missed out on investments in some of the latest tech boom’s shining social-media stars. But Kleiner Perkins and its partner Bing Gordon, a former executive at videogame company Electronic Arts and a biking buddy of Mark Pincus, can console themselves with their $642 million worth of Zynga shares.

[More from WSJ.com: Sweet Makers Try to Tap Market for Beer Candy]

Google

As if Google didn’t have enough money. The company made an investment in Zynga, and right now its stake is valued at $216 million. Google also may sell about $17 million worth of Zynga stock in the IPO, a tidy cash windfall. Driverless cars all around!

Yuri Milner

The man who never met a tech startup he didn’t love (or invest in) not surprisingly is a big investor in Zynga. The Russian investor’s companies, investment firm DST and Internet company Mail.Ru, together own Zynga shares that are valued at a collective $327 million based on the IPO price. That would buy a lot of furniture to pack Milner’s $100 million mega-mansion.

[More from WSJ.com: Flooding Knocked Out Supplies of Popular Toy]

Owen Van Natta He bolted Facebook. He was bounced from MySpace. And he resigned from Zynga last month. But Van Natta still holds more than 2 million vested Zynga stock options, good for more than $20 million in Zynga shares. Not a bad parting gift.


Thursday, November 24, 2011

Selling our souls to Mark Zuckerberg



Selling our souls to Mark Zuckerberg

September 28, 2011

When Mark Zuckerberg stood on stage last week to introduce Facebook's latest upgrades, the social media mogul essentially offered this deal to his 750 million (and growing) users:

Hand over your data, your life, your … soul. And enjoy eternal like in the social media universe.

This has been the deal proffered by Facebook from the beginning. Since 2004, many of us have been happily paying for this free network with the bits and bytes of our lives. Our reward: An instant source of birthday greetings and thumbs-up affirmation of every status update we post. It's been an intoxicating wave of friending, fans, likes and tags.

Rolling out now, a new "Timeline" format promises to document the entire history of our lives, or as much of it as we're willing to share — and we generally share too much. The look of Facebook is about to change, and our profiles will turn into slick digital scrapbooks. "It's your life," proclaimed Zuckerberg from the stage of Facebook's annual f8 developers conference, where he flashed tantalizing details of his own life ("first road trip with my girlfriend!") to wow the crowd — and some 80,000 people watching on a live stream.

The Timeline will likely appeal to the narcissist in most of us, but it's another new feature that marks the real sobering crossroads. As you provide all of your Timeline life data, new "Open Graph" apps, Zuckerberg said, will expand the notion of sharing for a "frictionless user experience."

A frictionless wha?

It means that in the very near Facebook future, much of what you do online — listen to music, watch videos, read news stories — will be available directly through Facebook. One-stop shopping, or listening or viewing. That's convenient. But Facebook, mostly through your "likes" — and with its growing list of partners, including Netflix, Spotify and The Washington Post — will track all of your shopping, listening and viewing and identify patterns so that it can suggest more things to buy, listen to or view.

Then, because this is a social network, all of your shopping, listening and viewing will be announced immediately to your friends. (Yes, even that Neil Diamond playlist you just tried to hide.) The "frictionless" part means that you'll contribute to those valuable market-research patterns without even noticing. Hit a "like" button on your friend's guilty pleasure song choice and, wham. It's word-of-mouth marketing on steroids.

And so "it's your life" more blatantly than ever becomes "it's your life for Facebook to exploit."

Which brings us back to the crossroads.

Market research is nothing new. The concentration of data in the hands of one company is, though, and it should raise concern. The data (and those patterns) provided by his 750 million users — us — is marketing gold that will be parlayed into enormous financial gain for Facebook and its partners (there's a Facebook IPO just around the corner).

Swept up by the feel-good effects of "friends" and "like" buttons, 750 million of us have unwittingly allowed a business model that relies on our giving away information and then celebrating the "free" access we have to it. SOURCE:

Shouldn't Mark Zuckerberg be paying us?