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Dan-E
15 June, 2009

Danilo Quinonez Dear Facebook, I don’t want to become a fan of anything, it’s stupid, and stop asking! I’m not going to play into your plan of serving me useless ads, by being a fan of useless stuff. — Oh and that’s pretty funny that all you display is dating ads because of my ‘single’ status…Please find a more creative way to monetize; C’mon I know you can do it.

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5 April, 2009

Facebook Testing Virtual Currency

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Facebook is finally testing a virtual currency system called “credits,” an expansion of its virtual gifts market. If the feature is broadly rolled out across Facebook, you will be able to purchase “credits” (100 for $1, the way it’s set up now) and send them to your friends. They can then send them to other people as virtual “kudos” or use them to buy virtual gifts on Facebook.

This is the closest Facebook has come to building an on-site PayPal, except there is no way (yet?) to turn credits back into cash.

A fine start, but Facebook will probably have to extend the feature beyond “kudos” and gifts to make it more useful — such as using it as a payment system for classified ads, new Facebook features, in-app purchases, or for Facebook Connect sites.

It’s also possible this feature is too late. This would have been much more useful a year and a half ago when Facebook was trying to establish itself as a platform for third-party developers. Now that that’s dead, and Facebook is trying to turn itself into a sort-of Twitter-plus-photos, there’s fewer uses for currency.

Facebook’s virtual gifts businessestimated last year at $35 million annual run rate — isn’t nearly enough to support the company by itself. But the company is smart to milk it for as much revenue as possible: It’s a good side business, and having a secure, in-Facebook currency should help.

Facebook Testing Virtual Currency

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24 March, 2009

Facebook Modifies New Homepage After Complaints

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Facebook Inc. is making some minor modifications to its new homepage design, addressing griping from users who complained the weeks-old design made it more difficult to find information they care about.

Facebook Modifies New Homepage After Complaints - WSJ.com

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