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

13.2.08

Facebook bans stupid-apps

Ever come across one of those Facebook applications that required you to spam a dozen of your friends with invites before you could access the results?

They're annoying. And now Facebook has done something about it. Developer applications must "offer some navigation option to leave the friend invite process," according to a change in the social-networking site's platform policy.

Via CNET

17.1.08

Scrabble-Scrabulous

On one side are two young entrepreneurs who have provided pleasure to millions through Scrabulous, an online game played on Facebook.

On the other, are two corporate giants - Hasbro and Mattel which own the intellectual property rights to Scrabble. The reality is more complex.

The two brothers, Rajat and Jayant Agarwalla, who launched Scrabulous in July 2006 are making more than $25,000 a month. The owners of Scrabble are getting tough not with a couple of hobbyists but with people who are running a business.
With 600,000 daily users, it is one of Facebook's most popular applications.
Enthusiasts have set up "Save Scrabulous" groups. Some of them argue that Scrabble benefits from the interest that the online game has attracted with new sales, and warn that they will boycott Hasbro and Mattel products.

There is also the fact that Electronic-Arts has a licensing agreement for electronic versions of Hasbro games until 2013. The quarrel over Scrabulous is a classic example of the challenges in maintaining intellectual property rights in a world where so much content is freely available on the internet.

Via FT

9.11.07

Image Day - Facebook Social Ads

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg speaks to press and advertising partners at a Facebook announcement in New York.

The online hangout said it plans to let companies target their advertisements on the site based on what its users and their friends buy and do on the Internet.

> Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2007, in Washington.