Source - http://edition.cnn.com/
By - Heather Kelly
Category - Hotels In Northern California
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Heather Kelly
Category - Hotels In Northern California
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
Hotels In Northern California |
Facebook is relaxing its rules for teenagers. The 13- to 17-year-old
set now has the option to share photos, updates and comments with the
general public on Facebook. That means strangers, and companies
collecting data for advertisers and marketing companies, will be able to
see select posts. Strangers will also be able to "follow" teens they
don't know and see their public posts in the main news feed.
The changes will take effect immediately, the company announced in a blog post.
The new setting might help Facebook compete against other social
networks that skew younger, and having public data on teens will also
help the company appeal to advertisers.
The social network is
trying to balance the less strict settings with two other privacy
protections. When new underage users sign up for a Facebook account,
their posts will be shown to a more limited audience by default -- only
to friends instead of friends of friends. If a teen decides to change
the setting to Public, she or he will see a pair of pop-up warnings
explaining what "public" means. One warns they could end up "getting
friend requests and messages from people they don't know personally."
Default settings for existing teens with profiles won't change or affect
past posts.
Facebook has been around
for more than nine years and stopped being a hip place for kids long ago
when it was invaded by parents, grandparents and advertisers. It has
1.2 billion users. Even as it expands to all ages, the company has to
work to hang on to the coveted teen demographic.
In a recent Pew study,
teens reported "waning enthusiasm" for the social network, citing the
presence of adults and drama. The site has become too important to
typical teen life to abandon, so 94% of teens on social media have a
Facebook account, and the average teen user has 300 friends.
Other social networks
such as Twitter, Tumblr and Last.fm don't prevent teens from posting
publicly. However, if someone under 18 wanted to bypass the setting on
Facebook before today, they could easily lie about their age when
signing up for an account. Children under 13 are not officially allowed
to sign up for a Facebook account, though they can skirt the rules in
the same way. When someone underage does sign up for an account,
Facebook assumes they have the permission of at least one guardian but
does not verify it in any way.
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