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Policy Watch: Facebook Adds New Platform Policies on Photo Tagging, Extended Permissions

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From insidefacebook.com

While the Facebook Platform is in the middle of a larger set of product and policy changes originally announced last fall, the Facebook Platform team has announced three new additions to its official Platform Policy regarding photo tagging, extended permissions, and user prompts.

Overall, these new policies are designed to address some patterns of behavior Facebook is seeing in some applications that tend to spam the stream. Let’s take a look at each one:

1. Photo Tagging

Here’s the new policy: “You can tag a photo only with the express consent of the user on whose behalf you are doing the tagging, and must only tag images when the tag accurately labels what is depicted in the image.” (DPP V.13)

Facebook adds in their blog post today, “Photo tagging should be used to tag a photo of the real individual in a real photo, and must not be used in collages, with avatars, or for marketing or promotional purposes.”

In other words, the class of apps that specializes in viral growth via photo-tagging collages just got neutered. Facebook has determined that this kind of behavior is not congruent with what it wants the user experience to be with Platform applications. Instead, it seems to prefer to favor more utility-oriented applications that offer photo tagging as a feature, not as the primary viral mechanic.

2. Getting User Consent Even After Getting Extended Permissions

Here’s the new policy: “You must not publish a Feed story unless a user has explicitly indicated an intention to share that content, by clicking a button or checking a box that clearly explains their content will be shared.” (DPP VI.A.1)

The issue here is that Facebook has created a publish_stream extended permission that apps use to publish feed stories on the user’s behalf that is by its nature open to potential abuse by developers who publish feed stories without getting explicit permission from users.

As Facebook adds in their blog post, “As with all extended permissions, publish_stream can add value to the user experience when properly used, and should be used carefully. Although a user grants the technical permission, developers must continue to seek the user’s explicit consent when performing actions on his or her behalf. By doing so, your applications will be consistent with the intent of the product and will demonstrate a high regard for user trust.”

We’ve received multiple reports from developers complaining that some apps are growing by forcing users to accept extended permissions, then spamming their feed as a result, without Facebook doing anything about it. This announcement appears intended to be a signal that Facebook plans to crack down on that more.

3. Posting the Same Feed Story to One Friend’s Wall at a Time

Here’s the new policy: “You must not provide users with the option to publish the same Feed story to more than one friend’s Wall at a time.”(DPP VI.A.2)

Facebook adds, “When asking users to publish a Feed story, do not use a friend selector or other means to select more than one friend at a time… We’ve noticed that a number of applications aren’t using the permission in a way that is consistent with product intent, including publishing photos that auto-tag multiple friends without the user’s consent, and posting the same Feed story to multiple friends’ Walls, which spams the stream.”

This one is pretty straightforward. Some developers are asking users to post content to a bunch of friends’ walls, and not all users may even understand what they’re doing.

In all cases, Facebook enforces punishments (such as removing access to communication channels) and suspensions on a case by case basis. Usually, first time offenders get lighter punishment, but as the severity of the problem and/or scale of the app grows, Facebook’s Platform policy team imposes stiffer penalties, occasionally suspending or banning apps altogether.

Facebook beats Google

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Facebook has become the most visited website in the United States as millions of people turn to the social networking site to play online games, says The Times London.

Socialmedia games is the driving force of the huge no. of visitors to Facebook.

Read the full article here : LINK

Fans er bedre kunder

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Bladet Markedsføring skriver i dag følgende artikel om facebookfans og deres øgede brug af de produkter og services som de har valgt at følge som ’fans’.

FACEBOOK-FANS ER BEDRE KUNDER

Ny forskning tyder på, at forbrugere, der har meldt sig som fans af en virksomhed eller et brand på Facebook, rent faktisk er mere loyale – og lægger flere penge i butikken – end forbrugere, der ikke er fans.

Af: Susanne Ingemann
Lav en fanside på Facebook, og kunderne strømmer til.

Helt så enkelt er det formentlig ikke, men et par forskere fra Rice University i Texas har ikke desto mindre fundet ud af, at Facebook-fansene ikke bare er mere loyale kunder, men også lægger flere kroner i butikken end de kunder og forbrugere, som ikke er Facebook-fans.

Det skriver nyhedssitet webmarketingblips.com.

Undersøgelsen, hvis resultater også er publiceret i Harvard Business Review, er fortaget blandt kunderne på café-kæden Dessert Gallery over en tre måneders periode.

Og den viser blandt andet, at de café-gæster, som også var Facebook-fans, besøgte stedet 36 procent oftere end de øvrige gæster på caféen – og at ”fans” brugte 33 procent flere penge end ”ikke-fans”.

En af de to forskere, professor i marketing Utpal M. Dholakia, siger, at resultaterne af undersøgelsen tyder på, at fan-sider på Facebook godt kan være en billig og effektiv måde at markedsføre sig på via de sociale medier, men vil dog ikke konkludere alt for håndfast på målingen.

– Man skal naturligvis være lidt forsigtig med at tolke på resultatet her. Umiddelbart vil Facebook-markedsføring formentlig fungere bedst som supplement-programmer rettet specifikt mod netop de meget trofaste Facebook-brugere.

Artikel link

Facebook increase local content sharing

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read much more her:

New Facebook Statistics Show Big Increase in Content Sharing, Local Business Pages