Source - http://mashable.com/
By - Pete Pachal
Category - Meeting Space Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Pete Pachal
Category - Meeting Space Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Meeting Space Santa Clarita |
If autocorrect has ever ruined your Facebook post, your prayers have been answered. Facebook introduced the ability to edit status updates starting Thursday.
The latest update for the Android Facebook app adds the ability to
"edit your posts and comments and tap to see all your changes." However,
the editing has not been enabled on any of the Android devices we
experimented with.
The editing feature will roll out to Facebook users on the web and Android devices over the next day, Facebook confirmed to Mashable.
The editing feature is not included in the latest iOS app, but will
likely get pushed out in the next update. Users will see the option to
"Edit Post" when they click on the drop-down arrow in the top-right
corner of a post.
Editing posts was potentially dicey territory for Facebook, since the
it brings the danger of a bait-and-switch with followers. A user could
conceivably write, "Who likes ice cream?" and get hundreds of Likes and
affirming comments, then edit the post to read, "Who wants to beat up
some cats?"
Facebook addresses this issue by marking the post as edited and
letting users access the history of any edited post with a click.
Google+, which has let users edit posts for some time, works in a
similar fashion.
Facebook has been slowly granting users more editing capabilities
over their content. Users can edit photo captions (that is, status
updates with a photo attached) and the ability to edit comments arrived a few months ago.
It's likely Facebook examined all the potential abuses and concluded the risk in letting users alter posts was minimal.
It makes sense: Any user who would mislead followers or friends with a
post they intend to maliciously edit would likely soon find themselves
with few followers or friends of any value.
For journalists on Facebook, the value of editing posts is even greater. As Mashable's Emily Banks has argued,
being able to edit a post in a transparent fashion makes Facebook posts
more like articles on a website, and now reporters will be able to make
corrections without deleting entire updates and losing conversation
threads.
What's your take on editing posts: Yea or nay? Have your say in the comments.
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