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Tag: Facebook IPO

  • Mark Zuckerberg is Trending on Twitter

    What did you expect? Mark Zuckerberg is the toast of planet Earth right now, as his multi-billion dollar IPO, Facebook, officially hits NASDAQ. Most of it is updates on Mark Zuckerberg’s current wealth, which is growing by the minute as his shares climb on the exchange. This is to be expected considering the initial high demand of Facebook stock. Eventually it will level out, and Zuckerberg will only be left with a few billion. Poor guy.

    How much is Mark Zuckerberg worth right now? Follow our Wealth-o-Meter in real time: http://t.co/07XGsy7E $FB
    28 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
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    Mark Zuckerberg is now worth $21.583 billion dollars. Has increased worth by nearly 2.5 billion dollars over past 5 minutes
    46 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    Mark Zuckerberg could now buy Kellogg’s, Heinz or Yahoo in entirety (via @carlquintanilla)
    2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    «@jonacuff Can you even begin to fathom the amount of hoodies Mark Zuckerberg is going to be able to buy today?»
    1 minute ago via Plume for Android · powered by @socialditto
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    Mark Zuckerberg is now worth 21 billion of my checking accounts.
    2 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    If there is no announcement today that Mark Zuckerberg agrees to buy the country of Greece, I’ll be disappointed.
    40 seconds ago via SocialScope · powered by @socialditto
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    I’m going to hit up Mark Zuckerberg for a no interest loan. I’m for sure the 1st person to think to ask him, right?
    4 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    If Mark Zuckerberg wants to be as diabolical as Aaron Sorkin portrayed him, he should buy all rights to “The Social Network” in next window
    7 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
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    RT @NorthAndrew: Mark Zuckerberg now worth more than Afghanistan: $21bn to $18bn
    8 minutes ago via Twitter for Mac · powered by @socialditto
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    Seems hard to believe that @Facebook could be worth that much–be careful if you invest. And Mark Zuckerberg–get a pre-nup.
    12 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    Doesn’t Mark Zuckerberg remind you of Julius Caesar? http://t.co/IVZ7gKBI
    13 minutes ago via Twitpic · powered by @socialditto
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    BREAKING NEWS.. Mark Zuckerberg is really rich.
    5 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    Now that is some real breaking news.

  • Facebook Didn’t Have The Showing Some Expected

    It’s here and trading. The Facebook IPO is away! The market opened trading the stock at just over $42 per share, which is modest at about 10% more than the suggested $38 per shares negotiated price. While many expected the per share price to skyrocket to over $70 during todays trading, it actually settled back to that $38 price rather quickly. In fact, some have already given up hope that Facebook shares will close at anything higher than $38 for the day.

    If you look back to the weeks before the IPO launched, you’ll see this is actually a really responsible stance from an investors standpoint. Even at a valuation of $90 billion, experts were warning prospective investors that it was way overvalued. Not to mention, big advertisers are starting to question the value of Facebook’s less than modestly priced premium advertising space.

    Some investors who paid a premarket price of anywhere between $70 and $300 are probably kicking themselves right now. But, the day is just beginning so I would say it’s to early for anyone to count their eggs just test. Interestingly, this is one of the biggest tech IPOs since Zynga, which also experienced a ten percent jump during its opening trading. Ironically, the Facebook stall has also killed Zynga trading today, at least for now.

    Regardless of what happens, today marks the dawn of a new era for Facebook where some of their attention will have to shift to keeping shareholders happy. Yes Mark Zuckerberg will tell you it is about connecting the World, but stockholders want that to happen in a profitable fashion. So we can expect some changes in the coming months. I can assure you of that.

  • Facebook Begins Testing Notification Updates

    With Facebook’s IPO now well underway, you might think the company’s employees might take some time off from other aspects of its business to bask in the fact that they’re all in the process of getting considerably more wealthy. You might think that, but it turns out you’d be wrong. Even in the midst of all the IPO hoopla, Facebook is working to improve its service.

    According to a report from TechCrunch, some Facebook users are starting to see changes in the way their notifications are handled. Specifically, they’re finding that they have an increased amount of control over just what shows up in their notifications. Now you can silence groups, individuals, events, or even apps from your notifications. Tired of getting requests to play that game all your friends love but you can’t stand? Tired of getting constant notifications about the activity of a group you were put in without your knowledge? Tired of getting notifications every time somebody posts to the wall of that event you’re not really interested in but are socially obligated to attend? If so, these new controls will make your life a lot easier. According to Facebook, the new notifications controls should be live for most users soon. Unfortunately, I am not one of those users who already has them, so you’ll have to make do with these screenshots posted by TechCrunch:

    Facebook's New Notifications Controls

    Facebook's New Notifications Controls

    You have to hand it to Facebook’s employees. Not only are they not sitting around watching Facebook’s stock price, they’re actually managing to implement useful new features. Not too shabby.

  • Facebook IPO: Which Apps Are On Top?

    Hey, did you hear? Facebook launched its IPO today. It’s pretty big news. What’s that? You’re too busy playing Facebook games to care? You should care because the IPO will most assuredly have an effect on the Facebook app ecosystem that you love so much.

    Putting aside the whole app-IPO relationship thing for another time, let’s look at the top apps on Facebook at the moment the IPO went live. They really have nothing to do with each other at the moment, but these apps will be soon be tied to Facebook’s IPO whether they life it or not.

    Inside Facebook took a data snapshot from their AppData service to give us a clear view of which apps are on top in this post-IPO world. The results are a mix of both surprising and not so surprising. The surprise is that Microsoft is sitting at number one in the daily active users list. It could be because Facebook and Microsoft are pals now, or that people really like being able to Facebook chat with their friends who may be on Windows Live Messenger or vice versa.

    The rest of the top five are games with Draw Something taking the number two spot followed by the usual suspects like Texas HoldEm Poker and Words with Friends. The top 10 gets a more varied, but still mostly games. Besides HTC Sense being at number six for some reason, Yahoo and Spotify fill out the rest sitting at nine and 10 respectively.

    The list of monthly active users are a completely different game with most of the top 10 being populated by social apps instead of games. According to Inside Facebook, this is due to the more apps taking advantage of Open Graph. As various Developer Spotlights have said, Open Graph is the key to more traffic referrals from Facebook. That is obviously reflected here with Socialcam and the Yahoo Social Bar taking up the top two spots.

    There are still a few games in the MAU list like Draw Something and Texas HoldEm Poker, but there’s other big players like Viddy, Bing and Microsoft all in the top 10. It just goes to show you that regular social apps have much larger growth over longer periods of times. Games on the other hand have great days, but not necessarily great months.

    It will be interesting to watch apps and games over the next few days as Facebook enters into this bold new territory. I don’t know if we’ll see an immediate effect on apps, but the IPO is going to have an effect one way or the other.

  • Facebook Facing Lawsuit For Tracking Users’ Internet Activity

    UPDATE:

    Facebook has responded to the lawsuit. In a statement emailed to WebProNews, a Facebook spokesperson said, “We believe this complaint is without merit and we will fight it vigorously.”

    ORIGINAL STORY:

    Amidst all the news about Facebook’s IPO there appears to be another interesting story in the works about the now-public company. It seems that a San Jose judge has signed an order combining several lawsuits against the now-public social networking company into one massive lawsuit that is seeking damages that could reach as high as $15 billion.

    According to a report this morning from Bloomberg, the suit accuses Facebook of continuing to track users’ internet activities even after they logged out of their account. This, the complaint argues, is a violation of the U.S. Wiretap Act, which carries a penalty of $100 per violation per day, with a maximum of $10,000. That means that if Facebook is found liable, they would be out $10,000 per user, which works out to around $15 billion in total.

    To put that in perspective, Facebook’s current market value is $109.9 billion. If they were to actually be forced to pay the maximum penalties for these alleged violations (which is unlikely), it would throw quite the damper on their very successful (so far) IPO. A request for comment emailed to Facebook has not yet received a response.

  • Mark Zuckerberg: How Much is He Really Worth?

    Mark Zuckerberg: How Much is He Really Worth?

    This is the latest news on the real worth of Mark Zuckerberg when taking into account the real money raised by Facebook’s IPO and Zuckerberg’s stake in the company. If you consider the $16 billion raised in the initial IPO, and the fact that Zuckerberg owns 28% of those shares, you get an estimation of about $4.5 billion dollars. If he sold all of his shares, and others bought them at current trading value, he would have $4.5 billion cash in hand. Or “in vault” as the case may be.

    Zuckerberg worth

    Obviously, this isn’t going to happen. Zuckerberg as CEO – selling all of his shares would not be a good thing. If the founder and CEO were to sell his shares at the beginning of the IPO, all confidence would be lost and stocks would plummet. If he could even find someone to buy them, without raising a bunch of eyebrows.

    Instead, what this is, is a more realist interpretation of the kind of buying power Zuckerberg now has. Some estimates put his worth at around $28 billion, representing his 28% stake in the companies $100 billion valuation. But in terms of buying power, this $4.5 billion estimate is much more accurate. If Zuckerberg now chooses, he has a lot of options for personal investments.

    If it were me, I’d take out enough to buy a personal island. That’s the only way you can get away from Facebook these days.

    source: click here for a large version of the infographic at Visual.ly

  • Facebook IPO Highlights How Bad Facebook Is For Realtime Search

    Facebook may be a much bigger social network than Twitter, but when it comes to realtime search, Twitter is far superior.

    There’s been plenty of speculation that Facebook could one day enter the search market, and compete with Google on the search front. We’ve contributed our fair share of this speculation. I’m not going to rehash the whole argument here (I did that here), but a recent study indicates that Facebook could have 22% of the search market right out of the box, if a Facebook search engine launched.

    More Facebook IPO coverage here.

    With the company being public now, the speculation will no doubt only continue to come out of the woodwork. Facebook and Google are going to be competing more and more in advertising and social media, so it seems logical that Facebook eventually tackle search in a more direct way, especially considering that it has some very valuable data about web users (over 900 million of them, apparently), which Google simply does not have access to, despite its increased efforts to inject social into search.

    There is a lot of potential for Facebook in search. However, it’s just that. Potential. Right now, Facebook search is next to useless, unless you’re looking for specific people, pages, apps, groups, etc. Searching through public posts is pretty much pointless right now. You can probably get more out of a “site:facebook.com facebook ipo” Google search.

    This morning, I searched Facebook’s public posts on Facebook for “facebook ipo,” hoping to get a feel fro what users have to say about it. Facebook lets me see close to 30 updates at once – probably not the best representation of the entire Facebook user-base.

    Search for Facebook IPO

    Compare that to Twitter search, where the updates roll in faster than I can read them.

    Facebook IPO search on Twitter

    Obviously, Twitter has the edge because it is public by default. Most tweets are available for anyone to see, but there is a lot of Facebook content that is public (granted, Facebook’s searching posts by friends is where it holds greater value to the user), and Facebook simply doesn’t let you seen more posts at once. You’re simply left to hope the ones Facebook is showing you at any given time are helpful to your query. It’s not like Google, where you can just click through various pages.

    As I saw someone else point out, you can learn a lot more about what people really think about the Facebook IPO from Twitter reaction, rather than Facebook reaction.

  • Website Allows Users to Predict Facebook’s IPO Closing Price

    Facebook kicked off its IPO today, hoping to raise roughly $16 billion, with a valuation of $104 billion. A new site called Facebookipodayclosingprice allows users to make their own predictions regarding the price of Facebook stock by the closing bell at the end of the day. A user can sign into the site via Twitter, and make a bet:

    I predict $ 143,258,735,607 ($57 a share) as the Facebook IPO day closing valuation http://t.co/8AoCZc6h
    1 minute ago via facebookipodayclosingprice.com · powered by @socialditto
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    According to The Next Web, the site was quickly thrown together by James Proud, in response to a Tweet by noted investor Chris Sacca:

    A quick hack from @jamesproud inspired by @sacca‘s tweet. I thought it’d be cool to know and build. Quickly knocked together with Python, Tornado, Postgres, Redis, Heroku, no sleep and Bootstrap.

    Sacca himself endorses the site, and predicts $56 a share, valuing Facebook at $140,745,424,456.

    One last time, place your bet: http://t.co/TvtP6Y4O
    17 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    After a sampling of some of the bets on the site, the lowest was $32 and the highest was $76. My bet sits in the middle of the road – for more news on Facebook’s IPO, go here.

  • Facebook IPO Draws The Ire Of Twitter

    Facebook IPO Draws The Ire Of Twitter

    The $100 billion dollar record breaking Facebook IPO is today. There are a lot of questions that will be answered both by the end of the day and the next few days as to whether or not the stock is a good buy. With companies like GM pulling advertising dollars, and the push from some people to put a woman on the board, Facebook has the possibility to go down in flames fast if they don’t fix their problems.

    The speculation and pondering by talking heads is getting old and I’m ready for trading to begin. Through out this whole craziness today, there is also one other coming besides the instant ultra billionaire status of Mark Zuckerberg, and that is the bashing on Twitter! Jokes, funny quips, and warnings are coming because if there is one thing that Twitter is good for, it’s advice:

    What will Google announce today to offset the massive focus on Facebook IPO? (Or will they?)
    36 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    … so basically, The Facebook IPO is not the move for the average person lol
    6 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    Why is Facebook going public?They couldn’t figure out the privacy settings either.
    16 hours ago via Echofon · powered by @socialditto
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    Facebook IPO is Kate & William’s wedding for business nerds
    1 hour ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
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    Facebook IPO Facebook IPOFacebook IPO IPO IPOIPOIPO…[What your news will look like today]
    3 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto
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    The world is about to change. Facebook IPO.
    5 hours ago via TweetCaster for Android · powered by @socialditto
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    This facebook IPO is criminal. Big bubble for the rich investors to get rich!
    1 minute ago via Twitter for BlackBerry® · powered by @socialditto
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    If the Facebook IPO goes anything like the Garth Brooks ticket release than I should be able to get some stock on StubHub for $600/share.
    1 minute ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto
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    Every penny increase in Facebook’s $38 IPO share price is $5 million for Zuck…
    Let the quoting & bids begin in t-minus 60 seconds… $FB
    4 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto
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  • Facebook’s Pre-IPO Hackathon in Pictures

    Facebook’s Pre-IPO Hackathon in Pictures

    With the entire world watching and waiting for the Facebook IPO, the company behind the world’s largest social network tried its best to celebrate while keeping the feeling of Facebook’s hacker roots alive. To that end, the same bell-ringing that signaled Facebook’s corporate status also ended its 31st all-night “hackathon.”

    Last night, Facebook employees stayed up all night for the company’s latest hackathon, events where everyone in the company is encouraged and challenged to create and inspire each other. While normally the hackathons are focused around taking stabs at wild ideas for the Facebook website, or to hack the spaces Facebook has chosen to inhabit, last night’s hackathon looked more like a party to celebrate the company’s impending IPO.

    Francis Luu, a product designer at Facebook uploaded dozens of photos to his Facebook account chronicling the event. To start off, here is Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg himself kicking off the hackathon celebration with a speech:

    Mark Zuckerberg kicks off Facebook's 31st hackathon

    During the night, the chairs were cleared out of the courtyard for some intramural street hockey:

    Facebook hackathon 31 street hockey in the courtyard

    This LEGO wall hack just might be my favorite:

    Facebook hackathon 31's Lego wall

    We may not see much of a result on the Facebook website coming from this particular hackathon, seeing as it was fueled by Anheuser-Busch:

    Facebook's hackathon 31 keg-fuel

    The hackathon wasn’t all celebration, though. Employees did settle in with their laptops for some old-fashioned coding and design hacks:

    The real Facebook hackathon 31

    You can see the rest of the photos over at Luu’s Facebook page. It will be interesting to see whether Facebook will be able to keep this sort of culture alive once it has to report to investors every quarter. The symbolism of the same bell ending the hackathon and signaling the beginning of Facebook’s corporate status was hard to miss.

    (Photos courtesy Francis Luu)
    (via Venture Beat)

  • Facebook Could Only Tease the Public for So Long

    As I write this, Facebook is 2:01 from launching its most important update in the history of the company: becoming a public company and being traded on Wall Street.

    When I joined Facebook in 2006, I thought it was kind of a cheesy alternative to MySpace. Well, it was, actually, either that or Friendster. Either way, I didn’t think it’d sustain popularity anymore than Xanga or ICQ or mIRC. It’d be a brief bloom in the garden of internet. And yet, it persevered.

    The company’s popularity continued to swell until Facebook was removed from a niche interest and started to become a cultural institution. By 2007, industry bird-watchers were expecting Facebook to make an IPO as early as 2008. And yet, it didn’t.

    Roll over and Facebook said 2009 wasn’t its year, either.

    2010 was also supposed to be the year that Facebook’s balls dropped and it’d mature into a fully reared adult. But again, it didn’t happen that year, either.

    Prolonging the foreplay is always a way to charm would-be suitors, and Facebook undoubtedly knew this. So in 2011, it didn’t give Wall Street so much as a peck on the cheek before shutting the door on another year. This bit here is actually kind of amusing given today’s lucre:

    Lou Kerner, a former Internet analyst at Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs, is even more bullish, suggesting that Facebook could be worth $59 billion in 2011 and more than $100 billion by 2015.

    So now it’s 2012 and Facebook is ready for its debutante ball of $104 billion. Facebook’s been warming up to this dance for many years and now its primed to melt hearts and bulge wallets.

    Much has been said, much has been done, and it’s come a long way since that Harvard desktop where a youthful Mark Zuckerberg conceived of a more social experience on the internet. 901 billion users later, the company is set to become one of the largest IPOs in history, not just in the tech industry.

    The public era of Facebook has officially begun. Will it last? Will it brand us all with the mark of the beast? Will it simply continue to do what it’s been doing the whole time? Will I finally get pushed into having a Timeline? Who knows. At this moment, it’s Facebook’s world; we just live in it.

    Godspeed, you indigo emperor.

  • Facebook IPO Presents New Challenges For The Social Media Giant

    Do you love Facebook or do you loathe the very existence of the platform? Your love or hatred can depend on a number of things, but I bet one of the main reasons is privacy. Facebook, as a social media platform, deals in information – your information. Is the IPO going to change how they use your information?

    It’s pretty obvious that Facebook uses your information for targeted advertising. Why wouldn’t they? They have all this information on you so why not use it to deliver ads and products that matter most to you. It’s a genius marketing scheme and has led to Facebook making bank on advertising revenue.

    All of this was before Facebook became a publicly traded company though. They will have to rely on more than just advertising now, but the ads will still contribute a lot to their bottom line. The concern is that Facebook may use your information in new and possibly privacy infringing ways to make more money. It’s a valid concern and one that could prove fatal to the company.

    D.E. Wittkower at the Wall Street Journal likens Facebook to a monopoly. While there are other social networking sites out there, they all go back to Facebook. Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr and others all go back to Facebook in some way or another. That’s the whole point of the Open Graph, it’s Facebook’s way to connect the entire Web into one service. It’s a weird monopoly, but I can kind of see what Wittkower is getting at. Facebook as the king of social media doesn’t have to worry as much about your privacy since they’re on top.

    The problem according to him is when people tire of Facebook or feel threatened by it. A recent poll found that over half of all Facebook users think that Facebook is a fad while a little less than half of the general population feels the same way. This was taken pre-IPO so it will be interesting to see what people think after Facebook has been public for a few months.

    This all leads to the idea that Facebook might not be the impregnable fortress of social networking that people make it out to be. One misstep can send the whole operation spiraling downward. As Wittkower points out, Facebook is dependent upon its users. It can’t operate without them. The user is all it has and the user have proven themselves to not be the most faithful lot.

    That’s not to say that Facebook is doomed, far from it. If you look back on all the unpopular changes made to the platform, so many people complained and threatened to leave Facebook. In the end, they didn’t and just got to used to it. What happens if Facebook starts to violate your privacy by selling more of your information? Are you going to leave Facebook or are you going to just grin and bear it?

    That’s the catch-22 with social networking platforms. They feed upon our inherent desire to be social. Humanity is willing to put up with a lot of crap just to remain socially linked to friends and acquaintances. Facebook provides that outlet to share our lives with others. There are others, but like I said, they all feed back into Facebook creating a giant social media kingdom with Facebook as king.

    So more than anything, Facebook needs to keep its users engaged. These users are what drives the Facebook kingdom. It must keep us happy so that we’ll keep on using it. If we’re not happy, then we leave. Without us, Facebook would have nobody to sell ads or Facebook Credits to. The IPO is just going to increase the scrutiny that users apply to the company which will in turn give the users more power than any other group within the Facebook ecosystem.

    Imagine if a rival service pops up that competes with Facebook on the same level, but offers more features and better privacy. That rival service is going to attract users and they might even leave Facebook. Their accounts might stick around, but Facebook doesn’t have anybody to sell ads to. At this point, Facebook would have to beg users to come back. If not, Facebook would have to answer to shareholders who put their faith in the company’s ability to retain users.

    Like I said, it all comes down to the user. They have the ultimate power in this post-IPO world that Facebook has entered today. Facebook may think they answer to the shareholders and those investing into the platform, but they ultimately answer to the users. The users are going to decide where Facebook goes from here. The social media giant would be wise to listen to its users. If not, they will have to start answering to the shareholders and trust me, shareholders are way scarier than a couple of disgruntled users.

  • Facebook IPO Doesn’t Stop Them From Rolling Out New Features

    The big story being covered by every major and minor news outlet today is that Facebook is going public, and while that is a huge deal for a company that began in a dorm room less than a decade ago, the company’s creators aren’t letting that keep them from rolling out new features this week.

    Some users saw the changes to their notifications yesterday, but for some it will take a bit longer. Now, when you click on the Earth icon in the upper left corner of the page and the notifications dropbox shows up, you can hover over a particular notification to “silence” it, meaning you won’t be notified about anything from that person or group anymore. Before, you had to navigate to the notification settings page to control what alerts you received, and even then you couldn’t turn off a single person or group.

    With Facebook adding new games and users forming new groups every day, notifications can add up, and not all of them need our attention. Many users have found themselves with cluttered newsfeeds and notification boxes, and even the most dedicated Facebooker can become fickle in no time once something proves to be an annoyance. The need for a more streamlined notification system has been evident for a while now, and if they can integrate that ease of use into their mobile app, users will be even more happy.

    10 Facebook Tips: Don’t you ever ever ever ever ever ever spam my notifications with stupid game requests.
    2 days ago via Twitter for BlackBerry® · powered by @socialditto
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    *Dosen’t go on Facebook for a week* Expectations: 23 Friend Requests. 9 Messages. 56 Notifications. Reality: 1 game request notification.
    7 days ago via Twuffer · powered by @socialditto
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    Facebook is finally giving users more control over notifications: http://t.co/Xg3qRtCA Been waiting on this for a long time.
    1 hour ago via Tweet Button · powered by @socialditto
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    Facebook use to be exciting, now I hate it. My notifications are no longer exciting because they are filled with lame invitations.
    9 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto
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    And just like that the Facebook notifications drop down design updates. #iterateiterateiterate
    16 hours ago via Twitter for Mac · powered by @socialditto
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  • Facebook IPO: Mark Zuckerberg Posts It On Facebook

    Facebook IPO: Mark Zuckerberg Posts It On Facebook

    So, imagine for the moment that you’re the CEO of a major company, and you’re taking that company public. More specifically, imagine that you’re the CEO of Facebook, and you get to ring the bell to open trading on the day of your company’s IPO. What do you do?

    Apparently, you post about it to Facebook. Or, more specifically, you have your people (after all, you’re the CEO; you’ve got people) rig the button that rings the bell so that the instant you press it, a post goes up on your Facebook timeline. That is exactly what Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg did this morning. The moment he pressed the button to ring the bell and start NASDAQ trading, a post went up on his Facebook timeline saying “Mark Zuckerberg listed a company on NASDAQ.” The post also tagged five people: Vice President of Product Chris Cox, Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman, Treasurer Cipora Herman, and Deputy General Councel Dave Kling. Check out the post and the tags below:

    Facebook IPO Zuckerberg Status

    Facebook IPO Zuckerberg Status

    Apparently, though, getting the button rigged to publish the post on Zuckerberg’s page was trickier than you might think. In a post on TechCrunch this morning, Facebook engineer David Garcia discusses the project and how it was done. The idea was conceived over lunch with Garcia and some co-workers. The first step, of course, was to run it past The Boss. Not surprisingly, Zuckerberg approved, calling the idea “epic.”

    Through a complex series of steps, Garcia and his fellow engineers rigged the button, which NASDAQ brought to Facebook’s Menlo Park headquarters on Wednesday, to a mobile phone that was signed into Facebook. The two were connected via the phone’s headphone jack. After a complicated bit of work, they managed to get it working. Now, in addition to ringing the bell and switching on the light to open trading, pressing the button would send a signal to the phone via the headphone jack that created an Open Graph event on Zuckerberg’s timeline. As you can see from the post above, it worked.

    While one might wonder whether it would’ve been easier to just have a random Facebook employee standing by with a phone to make the post manually, you’ve got to admit, this was much cooler.

  • Facebook IPO Will Earn Underwriters Some Big Cash

    Yes it’s finally here. In less than one half hour Facebook will begin trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange in what is probably one of the most well publicized IPOs in history. Despite early warnings that Facebook is already overvalued and that big advertising isn’t performing as well as hoped on the social networking platform, investors are hungry for Facebook shares and the buzz surrounding their IPO is huge.

    While Facebook is going to raise about $16 billion with their offering, those who have elected to underwrite the deal also stand to make a big profit. So who’s leading this barrage
    of investment bankers? Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are at the forefront of over 30 banks handling the sale.

    According to Bloomberg, Facebook will payout of 1.1% fee to the lead underwriters on this IPO and the choice to choose these firms was more or less a no-brainer. Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg has some experience with IPOs and she already had a relationship with several of the investment firms before the IPO even got rolling.

    Sandberg worked with Morgan Stanley’s co-head of technology investment banking, Michael Grimes on Google’s IPO and she leveraged that relationship working on this new IPO. This deal will not only bring the underwriters a lot of recognition for future deals, but also earn them about $176 million in fees.

    If you’re trying to get a piece of Facebook, get ready, trading is about to begin. Check back here throughout the day for updates on the IPO. If you’re buying, Good luck!

  • Nasdaq Asks How Facebook Connects the World

    It was recently reported that social networking giant Facebook presently has roughly 901 million active users. As the company files its IPO today, Nasdaq has asked some users how Facebook has better connected their world and altered their daily lives.

    The high level of social connectivity is an obvious function of the social network, as users can be accessed by all sorts of strange people they knew in grade school they hadn’t seen in decades. It can be akin to the ultimate class reunion, for those personality types who live fro that sort of thing. Though, the platform is also good for reconnecting with long-lost family members, friends one can’t pick:

    facebook

    Facebook also helps with everyday productivity:

    facebook

    Or maybe the user meant that Facebook had kept her from doing housework.

    Damodar Reddy of Kurnool calls the platform a role model for youth, and Giganto Machai half thanks Al Gore for the social network:

    facebook
    facebook

    This user thanks Facebook for his wife, who he plans to move to his country sometime next year:
    facebook

    I met one of my ex-wives on Myspace, and am still kicking myself for not having met her on Facebook instead.

    More of Facebook’s IPO can be found here.

  • Facebook IPO: Is It a Good Buy?

    Everyone is talking about the Facebook IPO today. What does it mean? How will it do? Well, for employees and early investors, it means they’re going to be a lot wealthier in the next few days. For everyone else it’s up in the air right now. Many people think that Facebook will go the way of MySpace and become an advertising wasteland. Zuckerberg has refuted this with his now famous quote to shareholders, “We don’t build services to make money; we make money to build better services.” Others think that it will be a good buy and are eager to get their hands on some shares when they become available. Which poses the most important question of all: Is Facebook a good buy?

    If you go with popular opinion, right now, the answer is no. Most think that the stock and the company valuation is way overpriced. And there is the history of now infamous tech stocks that went public around the turn of the millenium. Probably the one to consider right now is the case of theglobe.com, which started high at $64 a share in 1998 before completely tanking just a year later. Then there is the elephant in the room: Myspace. Once beating Google as the most visited site in the U.S., the company saw a sharp rise in users until News Corp bought it for $580 million in 2005. Six years later it was sold to Specific Media for $35 million.

    There are also plenty of current publicly traded stocks to compare it to. WebMD, Zynga and Groupon have all seen their stocks fall since their IPO. Some more than others. Groupon saw a big valuation of $700 million in 2010 which turned out to be way too high. Stocks have dropped to less than half their value in just a two year time frame.

    The dubious staying power of so many tech stocks has left smaller investors doubtful about whether buying Facebook is a good idea. This informal poll from Yahoo explains the sentiment well.

    Facebook poll

    The key to Facebook’s success will be its advertising platform. The big news here is that General Motors backed out of its $10 million ad deal with Facebook right before the IPO. Granted, this is a drop in the bucket when compared to Facebook’s overall advertising revenue, but it does cast a shadow of doubt in investors minds. They have to ask themselves, If a major advertiser is seeing their money go to waste with Facebook’s current advertising scheme, how does that bode for my company, which is no where near the size of GM?

    Those that think the company will pay off point to the less tangible aspects of Facebook advertising. They do not see the same amount of direct clicks on ads that competitors like Google have, but they are better at building brand loyalty. These proponents think that having their company appear like a “friend” to the consumer is much better than the direct sales they are seeing from ad clicks.

    Only time will tell if Facebook’s record-breaking IPO turns out to be a record breaking flop. There are certainly plenty of investors lining up to get their hands on it. Ultimately, it will be up to Facebook itself. They are going to have to stay fresh and innovative, which has so far proved difficult for other once popular social media outlets.

  • The Facebook/GM Ado Very Well Might Have Been About Nothing

    According to a report in Reuters today, General Motors’ decision to pull its paid advertising from Facebook was preceded by the social network trying to pitch the value of its free pages in the first place.

    On Tuesday, GM announced that it would be pulling the $10 million it spends on paid ads on Facebook because, as the automotive manufacturer said, the ads just didn’t work. It wasn’t the decision that conjured up the controversy so much as it was the reasoning behind the decision, especially given that GM announced the decision mere days before Facebook’s vaunted IPO (which is happening today).

    While GM says the timing wasn’t coordinated, its decision to cease paying for ads on Facebook ignited a storm of scrutiny over whether Facebook ads were even worth a damn. The report from Reuters today, though, seems to nullify any of that scrutiny – at least in the respect to this specific incidence – if in fact Facebook was trying to sell GM on the value of free brand pages.

    An undisclosed source told Reuters that Facebook’s effort to pitch the free brand pages “backfires on them in a funny way,” although the only backdraft that seems apparent might be artificial.

    Consider this formula: Facebook emphasizes the value of free brand pages, so then GM decides to stop paying for ads but says its going to maintain its Facebook page and just focus on the freely available content.

    How is that controversial?

    The true and perhaps only story in this saga then gets narrowed down to the fact that GM, although it was advised by Facebook to focus on the free pages, said that the website’s paid ads didn’t work. The pronouncement now appears to be a little more underhanded than originally perceived.

    A source of Reuters said of GM, “”They’re just going to try not doing it for a while and see how it goes; just make content and if it works, it works.”

    So now, if GM’s merely doing what Facebook advised it to do in the first place, where’s the controversy in this whole non-drama?

  • Eduardo Saverin Congratulates Facebook, Zuckerberg for IPO

    Eduardo Saverin Congratulates Facebook, Zuckerberg for IPO

    Who says money can’t buy everything? Well, maybe it can’t, but it sure can buy various levels of forgiveness, provided it was even required. Of course, when you stand to make $3 billion or more, there’s undoubtedly a tendency to look back on the past with more romanticized perspective, while allowing potential grudges to be dissolved.

    Or it could be that Eduardo Saverin is genuinely happy for his old partner, Mark Zuckerberg and the rest of the Facebook crew. Whatever his motivation, the incredible payday he’s about to receive or some genuine affection for his old partner, Saverin took to his Facebook page to congratulate the crew on their successful IPO:

    On the eve of the Facebook public float, 8 plus year in the making, I as co-founder wanted to look back and cherish Facebook’s early beginning. Congrats to everyone involved in the project from day one till today, and I especially wanted to congratulate Mark Zukerberg on keeping tremendous stead-fast focus, however hard that was, on making the world a more open and connected place.

    It’s largely true that we in the general public learned just about everything we know concerning the relationship between Saverin and Zuckerberg via The Social Network (the book and the movie), recently, Saverin indicated some creative license was taken with the story:

    The two’s relationship was the subject of the 2010 film “The Social Network,”in which Zuckerberg is portrayed as getting so caught up in making Facebook successful that he betrays Saverin and essentially runs him out of the company.

    But this week, Saverin said the movie was “more art than documentary.”

    Forgive my cynicism, but could the fact that Saverin stands to make more money than God billions from Facebook’s public offering be the reason for his all-of-a-sudden denouncement of the story, combined with the well-wishes he sent to the company he initially financed? Whatever the case, thanks to his citizenship denouncement, Saverin will, in all likelihood, get his billions without the burden of paying taxes attached to them.

    With that in mind, the next video is absolutely fitting:

  • Facebook Goes Public, Doesn’t Update Status

    Facebook Goes Public, Doesn’t Update Status

    Facebook is now officially listed on the NASDAQ. Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg rang the bell, and had his own status updated to say: “Mark Zuckerberg listed a company on NASDAQ. — with Chris Cox and 4 others.”

    According to TechCrunch, “Some savvy Facebook engineers rigged the NASDAQ button” to update it for him.

    If you look at Facebook’s company timeline, however, there’s no update. I have to say, that’s somewhat surprising. This is the biggest moment in the company’s history, and no update?

    Facebook timeline

    In fact, Facebook hasn’t posted an update since the Organ Donor thing at the beginning of the month. Has Facebook stopped using Facebook? Just kidding.

    Hopefully users are following Zuck. Otherwise, how will they ever find out about the IPO?

    On a related note, since we’re looking at Facebook’s timeline, it’s worth noting that only 66 million “like” Facebook. You’d think there would be more, with over 900 million users.

  • Facebook IPO: Watch Zuckerberg Ring The Bell

    Facebook IPO: Watch Zuckerberg Ring The Bell

    Though the opening bell has been rung and the Facebook IPO ceremony is over, trading on Facebook stocks has yet to commence. Facebook shares will begin trading at 11:30 EDT, and the stock is expected to rise significantly over the course of the day.

    However, NASDAQ has just released the video of the bell-ringing ceremony, which was held in a courtyard at Facebook’s Menlo Park, California headquarters. In the video, you can see Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg count down and ring the NASDAQ bell while cheesy music plays:

    Watch live streaming video from nasdaq at livestream.com

    Zuckerberg looks as if he thinks it’s all a dream. Of course, he and the rest of Facebook haven’t slept all night, which could explain the happy, yet glassy-eyed faces that make up much of the crowd. The bell-ringing was also the end of one of Facebook’s all-night hackathons, during which Facebook’s employees stayed on-campus overnight to come up with the next big idea for the Facebook website. These hackathons are a foundation of the culture Zuckerberg has tried to promote at his company. This particular hackathon was supposed to reinforce the notion that, even though the company is going public, there won’t be any changes to the Facebook lifestyle. The symbolism, though, of the same bell both ending the hackathon and beginning Facebook’s new corporate era is hard to miss. It will be interesting to see whether the company can keep its hacker spirit while striving to please investors on a quarterly basis.

    NASDAQ has a Livestream set up to stream IPOs, bell-ringing ceremonies, and interviews. Any action happening today will be streamed on that channel, which can be seen below:

    Watch live streaming video from nasdaq at livestream.com