Facebook και φήμες

Το θέμα με το «automation Lab» του FB έχει ξεκινήσει εδώ και κάνα μήνα.

Πριν αρχίσουμε να «τρομοκρατούμε» με διάφορες ιστορίες καλό θα είναι να το ψάχνουμε πρώτα λίγο. Δεν έχω κάτι προσωπικό η δεν θέλω να προσβάλω κανέναν.  Περισσότερα μπορείτε να δείτε εδω
http://www.snopes.com/computer/internet/automationlabs.asp


και το τι έχει γράψει το facebook :

Recently, chain letters have started to spread across Facebook with all sorts of misinformation. Let's get some information out there about how we communicate to you about Facebook. Right now, there are only four ways that we try to get information to users.

1. Home Page Announcements: Home Page announcements are the big boxes that push down your News Feed. These announcements contain information that we really want you to see; changes to your account, big new products we think you might like, and any information that is required for you to use Facebook effectively.

2. Product Stories and the What's New page: You may occasionally see stories about Facebook inside your News Feed. These contain useful tips and fun information about Facebook, but are not of the same importance as Home page announcements.

3. The Blog: Since you're here reading, you know what the blog is. This is a good place to get extended information about what's going on at Facebook.

4. Through Pages and Updates: This is fairly new with the launch of Pages, but notice that these will appear in your "Updates" section of your Inbox, not mixed in with messages from friends. These should be few and far between—the Update you saw from any Politicians you support that came from Facebook is a one-time occurrence.


We will never use any of the following methods to tell you information, or ask for you to take an action:

* Your Wall
* An inbox message from a friend—in other words, chain letters.
* Messages spread through Applications—if an application is telling you that Facebook is about to shut down, report it.


Since there's been a lot of wrong information about Facebook spreading around, we'd like to clarify a few things for the record:

* We are not shutting down accounts that are not "active" enough.
* We are not going to start charging you to use Facebook.
* We will never ask you to send us your password or login information.
* We will never ask you to avoid friend requests from a specific user. If a user is truly abusive, he or she will be removed from the site.
* We will never put the responsibility on YOU to send information to your friends. If we have information we need to share, it's our job to get the word out.
* When we do communicate to you about the site (with the exception of posts made on this blog) it will always be from a collective Facebook. You won't hear from me, personally, or from Mark, or from any of the Facebook bloggers you've seen here.


So the next time you see a chain letter, chain wall post, or chain anything, report it to our User Operations team, and tell all your friends to ignore it. We could make a joke here about passing this entry on to ten of your friends, but that's not cool.


Originally published December 17, 2007.





1 comments:

  Κλειδαράς Σπανός

25 Απριλίου 2020 στις 2:26 π.μ.

Αυτό το σχόλιο αφαιρέθηκε από έναν διαχειριστή ιστολογίου.