SAN FRANCISCO(AP)
Facebook Inc. is introducing more tools to help the software
applications fueling the online hangout's popularity and is
promising to intensify its efforts to weed out programs that
violate its rules for protecting users' privacy.
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's precocious chief executive,
outlined on Wednesday the steps in a programmers' conference
that underscored the growing influence of the Web site that he
started 4 1/2 years ago in his Harvard University dorm room.
A crowd of about 1,500 programmers turned out to hear Zuckerberg
discuss how he hopes to make it easier for people to share
information and entertainment wherever they go on the Web.
Zuckerberg, 24, is counting on programmers who aren't
employed by Facebook to play a vital role in realizing his
vision.
More than 30,000 applications have been designed to run on
Facebook since the company opened its site to outside developers 14
months ago. The most successful applications have been embraced by
millions of Facebook users, helping to turn the startups that
developed them into hot commodities.
Facebook estimates that the makers of its top applications have
raised a combined $200 million from venture capitalists. The
applications offer a wide variety of features, including sharing
photos, recommending music and playing games.
"I have to credit Facebook with a large part of our
success," said Hadi Partovi, president of iLike, which offers
a music-recommendation application. Partovi said about half of
iLike's 30 million users signed up through Facebook.
As the number of outside applications have swelled,
Facebook's users have ballooned from 24 million in May 2007 to
about 90 million today. The rapid growth has narrowed
MySpace.com's lead in the Internet's social networking
niche and helped privately held Facebook secure a $240 million
investment from Microsoft Corp.
Zuckerberg is setting out to broaden the appeal of
Facebook's outside applications by giving programmers access to
Facebook's tools for translating into 20 different
languages.
Facebook also is trying make it easier for its users to
transplant their personal profiles and favorite applications to
other sites.
The "Connect" initiative, announced in May, moved a
step closer to fruition Wednesday with the opening of a
"sandbox" for programmers to begin making their
applications more portable. Two dozen Web sites, including Digg,
Citysearch and Movable Type, already have signed up for Connect.
Facebook expects the feature to debut in autumn.
Having so many outside applications on its site has occasionally
caused headaches for Facebook, too. Some applications have included
security holes that gave Web surfers unauthorized peeks at the
personal profiles of Facebook users while other programs
"tricked people into doing things that they didn't want to
do," iLike's Partovi said.
Facebook has already removed about 1,000 abusive applications
since it opened up its Web site to outside programmers and plans to
move even more aggressively as it establishes clearer ground rules
for operating on its site, said Benjamin Ling, Facebook's
director of platform program management.
Besides banning abusive programs, Facebook plans to endorse
applications it considers to be "great." Facebook expects
the applications that get its seal of approval to be more appealing
to the site's users. ILike and Causes, a program for promoting
philanthropy, are the first programs to get Facebook's
blessing.
Rating the applications "is a huge shift in philosophy for
Facebook," said Sean Parker, Causes' chairman and a former
Facebook executive who remains close to Zuckerberg. "Every
developer involved with Facebook is going to either walk out of
here elated or scared to death."
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.