Facebook, the big lunch-snatching bully of social networks, is about to ruin nostalgia

It used to be that our past selves were locked in diaries and preserved in the amber hue of fading photographs. It was easier to self-edit; embarrassing images seen only by close friends, family and the voyeuristic guy at the chemist who developed our prints. The age of Google and Facebook has changed that. Our pasts linger online, ready to be interrogated, prodded and pulled up to embarrass us. The hormonal LiveJournal dragged out to mock the sombre adult writer, the audio clip of a music journalist interviewing a cheesy act as a teenage fan, those photos of you with that shocking haircut in 1995… you know the ones.
A growing trend is set to make those cringeworthy memories even worse. Created two years ago under the clunky name 4SquareAnd7YearsAgo, TimeHop resurfaces your Twitter, Facebook and Instagram posts from a year ago, sending you a daily email of nostalgia. Last week it raised an investment round of $3m, having persuaded major VCs that CEO Jonathan Wegener’s contention that “reminiscing doesn’t have a home online yet” was worth buying into. Inevitably, Facebook, the big lunch-snatching bully of social networks, is already moving to compete.
As the huge swathe of its user base who first joined the site as exciteable university students become parents, nostalgia is becoming Facebook’s stock in trade. Its response to TimeHop is a new feature called “On This Day” which flags up the most commented and liked items from a user’s past. Though only visible to a small part of Facebook’s audience right now, it will not be very long before this initiative is made available to everyone. Facebook wants to force up its already enviable time-on-site figures, keeping users within its walls for longer. It makes money from ads placed next to your present; now it wants to mine your past.
Internet culture has reached the same point television had got to in the late 90s and early 00s: a nostalgia crunch. The distance between a trend and the wistful looks back at it has shortened to the point of ridiculousness. I Love 1999 was broadcast in 2001 with stand-ups offering hack material about Ali G and the Millennium Dome in the same tone they usually reserve for white dog poo, the Raleigh Chopper and Spangles. Today, Buzzfeed engages in the same ludicrously industrialised nostalgia, churning out lists intended to make people barely out of their teens hark back to the good old days. Witness 12 TV Shows Of The Early 2000s Teenage Girls Loved and The 29 Fashions Of The Early 2000s You Wish Never Happened.
TimeHop and Facebook’s On This Day plans just further personalise that appeal to your basest nostalgic instincts. The tricky part is that they don’t smooth off the rough edges. Expect to see heart-wrenching breakups and foolish opinions shoved back in your face. With every day that passes, the internet and social networks become more like embarrassing mothers intent on pulling out the photo album and showing your new girlfriend those cute snaps of you in a tin bath or that time you were sick at Alton Towers. Nostalgia is only truly enjoyable when it is smoothed and shaped by our imperfect memories. On the web, the good stuff too often comes with the bad. Having Facebook make a buck from it makes that even more depressing.

How Twitter and Facebook forced Thatcher's adoring fans and hysterical enemies to face each other


A few months ago, the journalist Martin Belam predicted what Twitter would look like on the day Lady Thatcher died (see above).
It turns out, he got it largely right. Anyone looking down their Facebook feed can see arguments breaking out between those who loved her and those who loathed her. Whereas some people have genuinely mourned her, leaving flower in sombre tribute at her home, we've also had revolting spectacles like the Brixton street party to celebrate her death.
In both cases, pictures of the event were shared almost immediately online. Grieving or hating, the attitude was the same. Grief or hatred alone was not enough – only public displays would do. So, we can see the strength of feeling is there. Of course, this raises the question: which is right? Monster or Messiah?
If you were a Thatcher fan, you probably think she was more or less single-handedly responsible for dragging Britain into the 21st century, modernising the country's industry, freeing the state from the crippling unions and defending British subjects overseas. She won the cold war along with Reagan and restored the UK's place among the foremost nations of the world – and all as a woman who entered parliament at a time when there were almost no women in politics at all.
If not, you probably think that her brutal premiership destroyed the working class and divided the country between North and South and rich and poor as never before, as well as building the culture of reckless greed which still infests the City.
But hang on. The great benefit of social media is that we are hauled out of our echo chamber where everyone agrees with us, and forced to confront the fact that there is another side to the debate. The truth is laid out for us in our timeline: here were great things Thatcher did, and here were terrible, foolish things she did. A friend of mine said it reminded him of how China sees Mao: the official Communist Party line is now that he was 70 per cent good and 30 per cent bad.
Surveying yesterday's social media hysteria, the conclusion I draw is this: anyone who loved Margaret Thatcher as the perfect PM and is unwilling to accept any criticism of her, or anyone who thinks she was pure evil, like a medieval peasant recalling a folk memory of a tyrant king, is either disingenuous, ill-informed or a bit thick.
And often all three.

Facebook isn't censoring posts on NHS protests because, frankly, they aren't worth censoring

Download Free Facebook 2014 Chat Instant Messenger For Your Desktop

With Facebook Messenger you can chat with your friends from Facebook without using a browser.
You can see and respond to chats right from your desktop. Whether you're browsing other websites or using another app, you don't have to click away to stay connected.
Thanks to a notifier you will find out about new comments, photo tags and more as soon as they happen.
biNu Facebook Messenger allows you to access Facebook Chat to talk with your friends via your mobile phone.
The application comes as part of a bundle of tools from BiNu (games, news, sports, BiNu social and a full Facebook client, to name a few). To access biNu Facebook Messenger simply click on the icon that appears on the main screen when you launch the app (it's in the top-left).
How to fix biNu Facebook Messenger login problems
Setting up biNu Facebook Messenger can be a bit fiddly depending on what type of Java-enabled phone you have. You need to sign in with your Facebook account details, then agree to allow BiNu to access certain Facebook data.
Unfortunately, on some phones the button to do accept the Facebook terms is disabled. There is a workaround though, which is explained in the biNu Facebook Messenger help section. This involves visiting the BiNu Facebook emulator and accepting the conditions from there, before refreshing the login page in biNu Facebook Messenger.

Screenshots

biNu Facebook Messenger See all screenshots
What can you do with biNu Facebook Messenger?
The main purpose of biNu Facebook Messenger is to allow you to easily use Facebook Chat on your phone. You can see which of your friends are currently online, search for friends by name, or list all friends. A contact's status is indicated by a green circle if they are online.
To start a chat with biNu Facebook Messenger, simply tap on the person's name you want to talk with and type your message then click send. The other person will get this message straight away and can reply instantly. Unfortunately, receiving chat messages isn't always instant, and often you will need to press the 'Refresh' button to see their messages.
Besides the Facebook Chat function, biNu Facebook Messenger gives you access to your message inbox, allowing to view, send and receive messages.
A handy feature of biNu Facebook Messenger is the ability to get an SMS message every time someone sends you a Facebook message.
How does biNu Facebook Messenger perform?
biNu Facebook Messenger is pretty easy to use. It has a phone-optimized user interface which includes shortcut keys so that you can access options very quickly.
Message delivery seems quick enough, although obviously it depends on the speed of your mobile data connection.
biNu Facebook Messenger is a handy Facebook Chat client for feature phones, which lets you send instant messages relatively painlessly. Unfortunately it can be a bit of a pain to set up, though.

What's New in Version 6.5,What's New in Version 6.6,What's New in Version 6.7

What's New in Version 6.4

• Search for hashtags or tap them in posts to see what other people are saying about a topic
• Make restaurant reservations directly on participating Pages in the US
• Faster loading and a cleaner design for timelines on iPad
• Fixed a bug that was causing some people to see red notification badges when there weren't any new notifications

Screenshots

iPhone iPad
iPhone Screenshot 1
iPhone Screenshot 2
iPhone Screenshot 3
iPhone Screenshot 4
iPhone Screenshot 5
iPad Screenshot 1
iPad Screenshot 2
iPad Screenshot 3
iPad Screenshot 4
iPad Screenshot 5

Customer Reviews

#thisappsucks
You should really just stop trying to update this app since all you seem to do is make it worse every time. How about reading your feedback and addressing the issues you haven't fixed after longer than a year....still crashes all the time, still takes forever to load, still get random notifications about posts and links from friends that didn't at all involve me a few days later than they originally posted them, and seriously how hard can it be to give back landscape view. Fix the bugs before you add unnecessary and pointless features like hash tag searches and restaurant crap.
...More
Still no update to fix loading?
The worst app in the App Store. Your better off using your browser. It doesn't update your feed or load pictures.
iOSFB
Terrible, terrible app.. This is hands down the worst and most disapointing app I have ever used!! Its slow, it shows half your posts, it crashes ALOT, confusing and anoying to use, not user friendly at all! rather use the mobile site for both iphone and ipad

Facebook: four out of five daily users log on via smartphone or tablet

Facebook on an iPhone
Facebook: revenue from mobile made up 41% of the company's total $1.6bn second-quarter advertising revenue compared with just 3% in the same quarter in 2012. Photograph: Kennedy Photography/Alamy
Facebook is undergoing a mobile revolution with four out of five of the 24 million Britons who log on each day using a smartphone or tablet computer to sate their social appetite.
More than a third of the UK population now visit the site every day, and of the daily users some 20 million – 83% – use a smartphone or tablet to check updates on Facebook.
Facebook released its number of daily users in the UK for the first time on Wednesday, in part to combat data showing that its growth has reached saturation point. "It's to make clear our audience is growing both in size and engagement," said James Quarles, Facebook's regional director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
However, the social network declined to release up to date figures on monthly users. Facebook's monthly active users stood at 33m in December, and a spokesman said that no new number was available.
Facebook also declined to publish the number of daily users for prior periods, so it is not clear how fast daily engagement is increasing.
Quarles said the UK was leading a "massive shift to mobile" among its 1.1 billion registered global users.
"People start the day with Facebook and especially in the UK, which is a very big mobile market, there is a very high percentage of people signing in on smartphones," he said.
Facebook released its number of daily users in the UK for the first time on Wednesday, in part to combat suggestions that its growth has reached saturation point.
The social network has dismissed reports of a drop in visitors as "unrepresentative" and said that mobile usage of Facebook in the UK had grown 20% compared with last year. "It's to make clear our audience is growing both in size and engagement," said Quarles.
The social network is also beginning to emphasise users' mobile engagement in a bid to drive advertising to people's handsets. Mobile usage of Facebook in the UK has grown 20% compared with last year.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has pinned the site's future prospects on its ability to capitalise on the rapid shift to mobile – and this year the focus appears to have started to pay off.
Revenue from mobile now makes up 41% of its total $1.6bn second-quarter advertising revenue, compared with just 3% in the same quarter of 2012, according to the company's latest financial results released earlier this month.
Quarles compared Facebook's mobile reach of 20 million daily mobile users to television juggernauts such as The X Factor, which made over £100m for ITV at its audience peak in 2010.
"If you think about tentpole television events like Britain's Got Talent or The X Factor, 20 million available throughout Facebook daily is double what that audience would be," he said.
"We want to reflect to marketers that mobile is now a big part of the first screen. We have absolutely seen significant demand for it and as they consider places to follow time spent, the graduation to mobile is increasingly going to happen."
Facebook's December number of 33 million users in the UK dwarfs the latest figure reported by rival social networks such as Twitter, which said it had 10 million registered users in the UK last December, and eBay's 14 million active users.
• This story has been updated to reflect new information on the time period covered by Facebook's mobile data.

Sorry, you're probably not famous enough to use Facebook's VIP app

Facebook on an iPhone
Facebook could soon be providing celebrities with an exclusive mobile app to interact with fans on the social network. Photograph: Kennedy Photography / Alamy/Alamy
20m people in the UK are using a smartphone or tablet to access Facebook, according to the social network. Now it's working on making it easier for celebrities to follow suit.
Facebook is testing new mobile features for its most famous users to check updates and chat to fans, with what All Things Digital is describing as a "VIP app" that aims to get stars more engaged with its service.
"The idea: If a star pushed out a status update to fans that caused a rather large amount of chatter — like, say, Kobe Bryant's late-night torrent of scattered thoughts from a few months ago — the new app would make it easier to see the swirling commentary from fans, and mix it up with them."
Facebook hasn't confirmed the exact details, but told journalist Mike Isaac that "we are currently testing some mobile features designed to help public figures interact with their fans", and that "a small group of partners" is currently involved.
The tests are part of a wider drive from Facebook to get individual celebrities more involved with fan chatter on the social network, as opposed to just their managers and/or social media teams, who can already use the Facebook Pages mobile app to post and check analytics from their smartphones.
It follows the social network's launch in May 2013 of "verified" pages for celebrities and brands, using a similar blue-tick icon to the one Twitter embeds on its notable users' profiles to distinguish high-profile accounts from fakes.
Meanwhile, in March 2013, Facebook introduced the ability for page owners to reply directly to comments left by their fans, and then have these conversation threads bubble up to the top of their posts.
Both those features hint at Facebook's likely strategy with any new "VIP" app: encouraging more celebrities to interact with their fans on Facebook, rather than merely broadcasting updates at them.
This may in turn ensure their updates are seen by more fans. Facebook has been criticised in 2013 by some page owners who've seen the number of views and shares of their posts drop sharply over the last year.
In early August, Facebook promised more transparency about how it manages its news feed, explaining that every time someone visits Facebook "there are on average 1,500 potential stories from friends, people they follow and Pages for them to see", with Facebook's news feed algorithm currently prioritising around 300 of them every day.
The company also announced an update to that algorithm that will see "organic stories that people did not scroll down far enough to see" reappear higher up their news feed "if the stories are still getting lots of likes and comments".
The appeal of any app or new mobile features that make it easier for celebrities to pile into their page comments and keep the conversation going should thus be clear.

JCECEBOARD results 2014 - JCECE 2014 Admit Card - JCECEBOARD issued JCECE 2014 notification

JCECEBOARD results 2012 - JCECE 2012 Admit Card - JCECEBOARD issued JCECE 2012 notification


JCECEBOARD results 2012 -  JCECE 2012 Admit Card - JCECEBOARD issued JCECE 2012 notificationJharkhand Combined Entrance Competitive Examinations Board (JCECEB) has issued JCECE Admit Card 2012. The issue of JCECEB Admit Card 2012begins from May 14, 2012. The JCECEBoard Admit Cards are available online for download in the website: http://www.jceceboard.in/jceceb/.http://skyupdates.blogspot.in/

Candidates who will appear for the JCECE can download their admit card / admission card from the aforementioned website. To download the JCECE Admit Card candidate must Enter their Name and Father Name and then press Find Registration No. Candidates visit aforementioned website and click Download then Admit Card then JCECE butoon.
http://skyupdates.blogspot.in/

Romantic 2014 Ways to Spend yours life on Valentine's Day

Romantic Ways to Spend yours life on  Valentine's DayRomantic 2014 Ways to Spend yours life on  Valentine's Day

Go Ice Skating

You don't have to be a pro to have fun on the ice. Spend a few hours gliding around on the ice hand in hand, and remember to stop for some hot chocolate on your way home.

Stay In

Instead of fighting the crowds and shelling out a ton of cash, stay in this year. Make dinner together or order in, and eat in bed with a good movie.

Have a Picnic

Since it's probably too cold to picnic outside, bring the outdoors in. Lay a picnic blanket in front of the fireplace, pack up some food, and get cozy!

Take a Trip Down Memory Lane

Spend some time looking at pictures, and remember where your relationship began. If you reminisce about your first few months together, you'll remember why you fell for each other.



 

MHT CET Exam Results 2014

MHT CET Exam Results 2014

The dates of the Maharashtra Common Entrance Test MHT-CET have been announced by the Directorate of Medical Education & Research (DMER) for the year 2012. The MHT-CET 2012 will be held on 12th May 2012.


Application forms and information brochures will soon be made available by the DMER. Interested candidates can access further information about the exam, from the official website at http://www.dmer.org/.
The MHT-CET exams are conducted by the DMER to offer admissions to bachelor degree programs in the faculties of Engineering, Health Sciences and Pharmacy in the up coming session of 2012. Admissions will be offered in the colleges across the state of Maharashtra, India.
The Government of Maharashtra conducts the MHT-CET exam for the prospective candidates admissions in to the government aided colleges across the state. The DMER apart from graduation programs also supervises medical education in under graduate, postgraduate and super specialization. Moreover research activities are also co-ordinated in fundamental research, applied research and operational research.MHT CET Exam Results 2014

Google’s Mystery 2014 HUD Glasses Could Be on Sale By the Holidays

Google’s Mystery HUD Glasses Could Be on Sale By the Holidays



Google Goggles could soon become a set of physical goggles if murmurings from within the company are true. Could this be the death knell for smart phones?
According to a New York Times report, several unnamed Google employees have reiterated that these "Google glasses" will be hitting the market by the end of the year and will retail between $250-600. Purportedly under development at the Google X Labs, they're said to be Android-based (obviously), work on both 3G and 4G networks, and include a suite of sensory equipment.
According to reports from 9 to 5 Google, they'll likely resemble the Oakley Thumps. The glasses are also expected to include a built-in low-resolution camera that could be employed in object and location identification. This would allow the glasses to overlay pertinent information about your surroundings—though there's are a bevy of privacy implications to be hashed out with everybody wearing, and potentially recording, everyone around them. "You will be able to check in to locations with your friends through the glasses," one Google employee added.
On the software side, the glasses will reportedly work with a large number of Google's services—including the Google cloud, Latitude, Goggles, and Maps—while displaying the information in a Heads-Up Display.Google’s Mystery 2014 HUD Glasses Could Be on Sale By the Holidays

Music Industry 2014 To Sue Google Over Pirate Search Results?

Music Industry To Sue Google Over Pirate Search Results?

In recent months, the proverbial has really hit the fan for file sharing sites. But now, the music industry may be turning its sights to Google instead, focusing on the results they return to people searching for music.
According to reports from Torrent Freak, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) doesn't feel Google does enough to censor pirated content. A document written by the IFPI, seen by Torrent Freak, states:
"Google continues to fail to prioritize legal music sites over illegal sites in search results, claiming that its algorithm for search results is based on the relevance of sites to consumers. With a view to addressing this failure, IFPI obtained a highly confidential and preliminary legal opinion in July 2011 on the possibility of bringing a competition law complaint against Google for abuse of its dominant position, given the distortion of the market for legitimate online music that is likely to result from Google's prioritizing of illegal sites."Music Industry 2014 To Sue Google Over Pirate Search Results?

Chewing Gum Can Boost Mental Performance 2014

Chewing Gum Can Boost Mental Performance


Wired points out a number of studies that show chewing gum can, in fact, boost your memory, attention, cognitive reasoning skills, and other mental abilities.
It's unclear why gum seems to have such a positive effect on our mental state, but a number of studies have shown it to be true:
Gum is an effective booster of mental performance, conferring all sorts of benefits without any side effects. The latest investigation of gum chewing comes from a team of psychologists at St. Lawrence University. The experiment went like this: 159 students were given a battery of demanding cognitive tasks, such as repeating random numbers backward and solving difficult logic puzzles. Half of the subjects chewed gum (sugar-free and sugar-added) while the other half were given nothing. Here's where things get peculiar: Those randomly assigned to the gum-chewing condition significantly outperformed those in the control condition on five out of six tests.
However, while these benefits have been studied time and again, this most recent study showed that the positive effects only last about 20 minutes. After more than 20 minutes of chewing, gum chewers are no better off than non-chewers when it comes to performance. Still, it's an interesting read—and a good excuse to chew a bit of gum (quietly, and preferably sugar-free) during your next college exam, paper, or other mentally intensive activity. Hit the link for the full article, and of course

Facebook boosts connections, not happiness: Study

WASHINGTON: People who use Facebook may feel more connected, but less happy. A study of young adults released Wednesday concluded that the more people used Facebook, the worse they subsequently felt. "On the surface, Facebook provides an invaluable resource for fulfilling the basic human need for social connection," said University of Michigan social psychologist Ethan Kross, lead author of the study. "But rather than enhance well-being, we found that Facebook use predicts the opposite result -- it undermines it.
" The researchers recruited 82 young adults who had smartphones and Facebook accounts and assessed their subjective well-being by texting them at random times five times a day for two weeks. The researchers said the study, published in the scientific journal PLOS, was believed to be the first measuring Facebook's impact on happiness and life satisfaction. "This is a result of critical importance because it goes to the very heart of the influence that social networks may have on people's lives," said University of Michigan cognitive neuroscientist John Jonides, another author of the paper. The researchers monitored the study group by asking them how they felt, whether they were worried or lonely, how much they used Facebook and how much they interacted "directly" with people. "The more people used Facebook at one time point, the worse they felt the next time we text-messaged them," the researchers wrote. "The more they used Facebook over two weeks, the more their life satisfaction levels declined over time."
 In contrast, personal interactions led people to feel better over time, they noted. The scientists also found no evidence that Facebook use was merely a symptom of feeling low. People were not more likely to use Facebook when they felt bad, although they did use the social network more frequently when they were lonely. "It was not the case that Facebook use served as a proxy for feeling bad or lonely," Kross said. Yet the researchers stopped short of claiming the same effect for all Facebook users or other social networks.
 "We concentrated on young adults in this study because they represent a core Facebook user demographic," the study said. "However, examining whether these findings generalize to additional age groups is important. Future research should also examine whether these findings generalize to other online social networks." The study comes a week after British researchers published a report concluding that frequent photo posting on Facebook can damage real-life relationships. The discussion paper led by David Houghton of the University of Birmingham said Facebook photo postings, especially of oneself, are not always welcomed by less intimate friends. "People, other than very close friends and relatives, don't seem to relate well to those who constantly share photos of themselves,
" Houghton said. The researchers pointed out that while Facebook creates a homogenous group of "friends," most users have different types of relationships with those viewing their postings. "It's worth remembering that the information we post to our 'friends' on Facebook actually gets viewed by lots of different categories of people: partners; friends; family; colleagues and acquaintances; and each group seems to take a different view of the information shared," the researcher said.

Welcome to Facebook - Log In, Sign Up or Learn More

Facebook is an online social networking service, whose name stems from the colloquial name for the book given to students at the start of the academic year by some university administrations in the United States to help students get to know each other.[7] It was founded in February 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg with his college roommates and fellow Harvard University students Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz and Chris Hughes.[8] The website's membership was initially limited by the founders to Harvard students, but was expanded to other colleges in the Boston area, the Ivy League, and Stanford University. It gradually added support for students at various other universities before opening to high school students, and eventually to anyone aged 13 and over. Facebook now allows any users who declare themselves to be at least 13 years old to become registered users of the site.[9] Users must register before using the site, after which they may create a personal profile, add other users as friends, exchange messages, and receive automatic notifications when they update their profile. Additionally, users may join common-interest user groups, organized by workplace, school or college, or other characteristics, and categorize their friends into lists such as "People From Work" or "Close Friends". As of September 2012, Facebook has over one billion active users,[10] of which 8.7% are fake.[11] According to a May 2011 Consumer Reports survey, there are 7.5 million children under 13 with accounts and 5 million under 10, violating the site's terms of service.[12] Facebook (as of 2012) has about 180 petabytes of data a year and grows by over half a petabyte every 24 hour. [13] In May 2005, Accel partners invested $12.7 million in Facebook, and Jim Breyer[14] added $1 million of his own money to the pot. A January 2009 Compete.com study ranked Facebook as the most used social networking service by worldwide monthly active users.[15] Entertainment Weekly included the site on its end-of-the-decade "best-of" list, saying, "How on earth did we stalk our exes, remember our co-workers' birthdays, bug our friends, and play a rousing game of Scrabulous before Facebook?"[16] Facebook eventually filed for an initial public offering on February 1, 2012, and was headquartered in Menlo Park, California.[2] Facebook Inc. began selling stock to the public and trading on the NASDAQ on May 18, 2012.[17] Based on its 2012 income of USD 5.1 Billion, Facebook joined the Fortune 500 list for the first time, being placed at position of 462 on the list published in May 2013
Facebook.svg Facebookhomedecember2012.png Screenshot of Facebook main page on August 1 2013 Type Public Traded as NASDAQ: FB Foundation date Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. (February 4, 2004) Headquarters Menlo Park, California, U.S. Area served United States (2004–05) Worldwide (2005–present) Founder(s) Mark Zuckerberg Eduardo Saverin Andrew McCollum Dustin Moskovitz Chris Hughes Key people Mark Zuckerberg (Chairman and CEO) Sheryl Sandberg (COO) Industry Internet Revenue Increase $5.1 billion (2012)[1] Operating income Decrease US$ 538 million (2012)[2] Net income Increase US$ 53 million (2012)[2] Total assets Increase US$ 15.10 billion (2012)[2] Total equity Increase US$ 11.75 billion (2012)[2] Employees 5,299 (June,2013)[3] Subsidiaries Instagram Website facebook.com Written in C++ and PHP[4] Alexa rank Increase 1 (June 2013)[5] Type of site Social networking service Registration Required Users 1.15 billion (active March 2013)[6] Available in Multilingual (70) Launched February 4, 2004 Current status Active