Facebook Likes – How big a deal is this?

April 25th, 2010, By talk
Facebook TouchGraph

Facebook TouchGraph via: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jurvetson/3346659199

Mark Zuckerberg’s dramatic announcement at last week’s f8 signifies that Facebook has decided to take upon itself a responsibility for enabling and encouraging users to expand their dialog outside the scope of Facebook and on the web at large. It’s an ambitious project aiming to add a personal and social aspect to every website capable of adding Facebook’s buttons.

Facebook planned the launch carefully and at the outset of the feature its already available on many top online destinations, including: CNN, ESPN, IMDb, and others. Backed by the knowledge that Likes are supported by such a team of powerhouses Zuckerberg ventured a prediction that Facebook likes would cross the 1 Billion mark 24 hours from launch.

Its interesting to note that at the most basic level there’s little that is new about the new feature. After all people have been “Liking” each other’s Facebook posts, some of which include links to external websites, from the very start.  In fact there’s a whole industry of  services and plugins aimed at doing exactly what Facebook has now made generally accessible itself. One might well ask “What’s all the excitement about?”

The excitement is justified in this case for a number of reasons:

  1. The scope of the move – Facebook’s announcement affects 400 million users on Facebook alone, this is before we count the countless millions of users on the partner sites mentioned above who aren’t Facebook users…
  2. The scope of data Facebook will own – For me the most significant fact that the announcement highlights is that Facebook will greatly increase the already unrivaled data set it owns regarding each and every one of its users. Facebook will now know not only whatever these users shared about themselves explicitly and via their social data, but will also have the ability to couple this data to a users “likes”, or in other words couple the personal and social data to behavioral data reflecting a user  acknowledged preferred webpages.

Why is this a big deal?

Other than the fact that Facebook, a private company, will now know more about each and every one of it’s users than any company has ever known before (shudder), there are deeper implications for the web of this new functionality that we’ll probably begin to see faster than we can imagine. Facebook powered sites have, at least in theory, the ability to provide a tailored individual experience for every Facebook user visiting them. They might show the user which of is his/her friends reacted to the content, and how, or they might suggest “Smart sharing” – offering those friend most likely to be interested in this particular type of content. The full extent of the future functionality the move enables is difficult to predict but there can be little doubt that the web is about to undergo a pretty significant change.

The Gentleman’s guide to Facebook, Friend requests & Netiquette

March 31st, 2009, By talk

The wildcard friend request conundrum

Facebook friend requests come in all shapes and sizes, anything from a flirtatious “Hey Gorgeous” to a blast from your kindergarten past. As online friendship becomes more socially acceptable, so do friend requests from people you’ve never met or even heard of. Wildcard Facebook friend requests represent a social conundrum and raise a prickly issue: Is there a polite way to ask someone:
“Excuse me but WHO THE !@#$ ARE YOU?”

Who the !@#$ are you Takeru Kobayashi?!?

I’m personally facing this very issue with the aforementioned Mr. Takeru Kobayashi, who has requested my Facebook friendship and whom, to the best of my knowledge, I’ve never met or heard of before. Fortunately for me Headup can assist me to avoid this potential netiquette disaster.

Headup – more omniscient* than Deep Thought, cooler than HAL

Headup’s unique ability to identify people and collect their profiles from a range of social services makes it an ideal tool for snooping out friendship candidates, flirtatious paramours, and self proclaimed potty pals, prior to approving them as your Facebook friends.

Stalking, snooping and spying – the Headup way

Headup will often be able to show you some photos of the flirt along with some of your common friends, tell you a bit about what your former kindergarten confederate is up to, and reveal that Takeru Kobayashi, AKA “The Tsunami”, is an illustrious member of the most prestigious of clubs: former winners of Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Competition.

Armed with this smorgasbord of information I can now make an informed choice on whether to welcome Takeru into my circle of friends, or leave him out in the cold and watch the videos Headup provides of his hotdog eating antics instead.

Takeru Kobayashi AKA "The Tsunami"

Takeru "The Tsunami" Kobayashi doing his thing

This ability to check out potential friends beforehand makes Headup a powerful boost to your Facebook activities, enabling you to filter out identity thieves, serial ‘befrienders‘ and other social hazards.

How you can get this:

If you don’t have it yet, download the Headup plug-in for Firefox and follow the instructions, make sure you connect the addon to your Facebook account (at least).

If you already have Headup, make sure you’re logged into your Facebook account and click the little Headup icon on your browser’s status bar (bottom right hand corner of the window).

Headup settings - bottom right of your browser

Headup settings - bottom right of your browser

This will bring you to the personalization screen

Connect Headup to your Facebook account

Connect Headup to your Facebook account

Make sure that when you’re popped over to the Facebook authorization window you agree to give access to Headup.

Click the Finish button.

Finish connecting Headup to your services to save your settings

Finish connecting Headup to your services to save your settings

That’s it, you’re done!

Next time you visit Facebook peoples’ names will be underlined with Headup’s signature orange dashed line and hovering over them will prompt Headup to provide you with whatever details it is able to retrieve for them.

Let me know if you come up with something juicier than a hotdog…

Enjoyed this post?
You might like  “Yo Tweeps! Check Headup on Twitter…” too.
It explains how to use Headup to boost your Tweeting…

*  Thought about this after writing the post:
By definition it’s impossible to be “more omniscient”