Showing posts with label Facebook News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook News. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Facebook CEO warns Filipino people about Pornographic Issues


If you are a concerned Filipino, please share this message to your friends.
Mark Zuckerberg – CEO of Facebook released an online statement regarding the spreading porn pics and spams. Released November 16, 2011 9PM Pacific Time Zone.
The porn attacks originated in the Philippines and are being published by Filipinos all over Facebook, our experts here at Facebook are doing everything they can to stop it from spreading any further (outside the Philippines) and to eliminate the porn and spam threat completely which have been causing other Facebook users ‘a hard time’. Filipinos should also be vigilant and report any spam links and pornographic materials. 41% of Facebook members around the world are aged 12-17 years old, we cannot be exposed to this kinds of things through Facebook. If this continues and more spams keep being posted, we will have no choice but to ban Philippine users from using Facebook. We at Facebook will not tolerate outlandish behavior and indecency.
Please be reminded that this has to stop. 

I have noticed that most people in Facebook are posting pornography photos, sharing them which is bullcrap. If Apnea is a sincerely law-abiding citizen (despite being an alt-porn model), why can’t Filipinos do the same? C’mon, we’re always the target when it comes to sex. Foreigners go to the Philippines not only to tour around, but also because of sex.

This didn’t happen before. Unfortunately, since these porn thing went viral and shit, I think there’s something that we really have to do. Don’t just sit there and drool over these porn photos, you think it’s funny? Sharing pornographic material is really a sign of disrespect towards other people. Everything that is related to violence and porn, they’re just sick.

Pornography is not for general viewing!

Basically, pornography is one of the social issues in the Philippines. If FHM is pornographic, Playboy’s worse. MAXIM isn’t bad, but it’s still for the matured people. Hentai, however, is alright since Japanese culture thinks that hentai is for entertainment. Why, do you think being a gravure idol is indecent? Malicious? Porn? If Japanese pop culture thinks that this is normal, what about the others? Of course, it’s malice. Malice, like everyone’s showing their kids pornography, which is again, indecent.

I really don’t know what to say, but let’s just hope that there are a handful who will report these photos…

Here’s another… warning

Pornbook. The CEO of Facebook warn us about this pornographic issues. By us means, We the Philippines, their data has been check and all the pornographic issues are being publish by us.. Filipinos.. If we continue this behavior, Facebook will ban Philippines.

Facebook currently has 4 VIRUSES:

1. If you get a notice of a PHOTO TAG. Do not open it.
2. If you get a notification that a friend reported you for offensive behavior etc. Do not open it.
3. Is a Video saying 99% of People can not watch this for more the 15 Sec. Do not open it is also a virus.
4. All Messages from your friends via chat saying click this link. Do not open! These are BAD ones and will crash your computer.
Share and warn friend.

WARNING: PLEASE LISTEN UP! HACKERS ARE BUSY ON FACEBOOK AGAIN! They post some insulting messages on the wall of your friends with your regards, without you knowing about it. If you receive one of those messages in my name, it wasn’t me posting them. Put this on your wall and warn your friends. Also, DONT open the video about a guy with a BIG ZIT. It is a virus. Share the news.

Friday, September 02, 2011

Facebook to launch music service next month with Spotify and other partners


(CBS) - Get ready music-loving Facebook users, the social network plans to launch a music service in September, according to CNBC.

We first learned of the music service rumors back in July when tech blogger Jeff Rose published a snippet of code that looks like a call to download an app called "Facebook Vibes."

Although we don't know if that's going to be the actual name of Facebook's upcoming music platform, we did learn then that the service would let users listen to music from its site.

Facebook Vibes could be music service linked to Spotify

CNBC reports, "a source familiar with the plan" said the service will launch September 22 at its F8 conference.

Facebook will likely not become a music retailer though. Instead, it's probably going to work with music streaming services like Pandora, Spotify and Rdio. "If that's the case, rather than threaten existing music services, a Facebook music platform could actually provide a boost in traffic to those that offer free, ad-supported services," CNBC adds.


So how might this work? "Music services could create a player that would sit within Facebook, letting users hear music without leaving the site. However, the music itself would still be delivered through the third-party service, which users would be required to log in to before listening," the Wall Street Journal points out. "Such players wouldn't be mandatory, [sources] said, so that if a user wanted to listen to a Facebook friend's Spotify playlist, that person might need to switch applications to hear it."

The concept seems pretty awesome and would bring us back to the good ol' Myspace days of discovering music via our friends' personal picks.

Facebook Plans to Launch Music Platform in September

Facebook plans to launch a music platform at its f8 conference in San Francisco on 9/22, a source with knowledge of the plans tells CNBC.


The social network's music platform launch has been long rumored, but has not yet materialized. The Facebook music launch would be significant because Facebook's huge user base (more than 750 million users) could provide a new marketplace for recording artists and music publishers.

What's less clear is exactly how Facebook's music platform would work. Checks within the music industry suggest that Facebook has not been negotiating to actually become a music retailer itself; instead, it may be creating an environment where third-party music services such as Pandora, Spotify, MOG and others can offer their wares. If that's the case, rather than threaten existing music services, a Facebook music platform could actually provide a boost in traffic to those that offer free, ad-supported services.

A music launch would fit the vision Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg outlined earlier this year, when he said it's now best to judge Facebook's growth based on the volume of content users are sharing, rather than on the raw number of active users.

Coming in September, a Facebook music launch would also put Facebook in closer competition with Apple [AAPL  384.78    -0.05  (-0.01%)   ], which does its annual music event in September. Apple, the world's largest music retailer, typically updates its iTunes software and updates its line of iPods in September.

Facebook and Apple butted heads after Apple's music event last year, when Apple rolled launched its Ping social network. Ping included Facebook integration, but without Facebook's blessing. Apple removed tight Facebook integration from Ping, and has since partnered more closely with Twitter, a rival social utility.