The Web is not just about information; its about people. In this presentation, Facebook's Dave Morin will discuss the industry's efforts to move toward a more social Web, and how openness can create a better experience for users sharing and connecting across the Web.
36. Mission
Give people the power to
share and make the world
more open and connected
Saturday, February 28, 2009
37. Over 175 million active users Feburary
2009
175M
175M
140M
105M
70M
35M
0M
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Saturday, February 28, 2009
38. Over 660,000 developers
660
k
660k
495k
330k
165k
0k
May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan
Saturday, February 28, 2009
73. Social Context as a Filter
Friend Linking
Massive
amounts
of content
Friends are
the filter
Saturday, February 28, 2009
74. Social Context as a Filter
Friend Linking
Massive
amounts
of content
Friends are
the filter
Videos User Reviews Photos People Discussion Blogs
Board
Saturday, February 28, 2009
75. Social Context as a Filter
Friend Linking
Massive
amounts
of content
Friends are
the filter
User Reviews Discussion Blogs
Board
Discovery
of friends
content
Videos Photos People
Saturday, February 28, 2009
127. Join the movement.
Today at 1:40 with Josh Elman
Saturday, February 28, 2009
128. (c) 2007 Facebook, Inc. or its licensors. quot;Facebookquot; is a registered trademark of Facebook, Inc.. All rights reserved. 1.0
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Notes de l'éditeur
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
Openness is not just about technology.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
I’ve already talked a bit about the social graph. People are only one dimension of the graph--it links everything--all of your interests like your favorite music and the causes you support or the blogs that you read and the comments you leave on them or your favorite restaurant and the review you wrote of it.
Facebook’s mission is to give people the power to share themselves and make the world more open and transparent.
What we all do – our engineers at Facebook and developers on Platform – is we give people tools, and the power, to share themselves and communicate in different ways. What we have found is that the most important information in the world is inside people. It’s how they’re thinking, how they’re feeling, how they relate to the people around them. And that information isn’t accessible in the world. It’s not out there available to be indexed. It’s only accessible if people choose to share it themselves and have the tools to do so, and that’s what we’re building.
The first version of the web was about putting all the information that existed offline now online. The next version will be about understanding that the web isn’t about sharing information, it’s about people sharing themselves. The full potential of the web is gives power back to the people so that everyone has a voice and can share what is important to them.
When that happens, more information will be available because people had control and chose to share it. The world will be a more transparent place, and this transparency will help us understand each other. It will help us see the good and the bad that we do and help us give each other more feedback to do more good. As the world gets more and more complex, transparency and sharing are key to the world being in harmony. And that’s what we’re all doing – we’re giving people the power to the share themselves and create this world.
This isn’t one organization’s mission. Making the world more transparent and bringing people together is more than any one organization can do. This is what we’re all doing, and we’re doing it together.
Today, Facebook has over 150 million active users around the world. We define active users as people who’ve visited Facebook at least once in the past 30 days.
We designed Facebook Platform to be easy to learn and get started with. And in just a little more than a year, more than half a million developers have joined our movement and are building on top of Facebook Platform.
You’ve built more than [25,000] applications, and that number is growing by more than [500] every day.
Most of our growth over the past year has been international. A year ago, [65%] of people using Facebook were in the US.
Most of our growth over the past year has been international. A year ago, [65%] of people using Facebook were in the US.
Facebook’s mission is to give people the power to share themselves and make the world more open and transparent.
What we all do – our engineers at Facebook and developers on Platform – is we give people tools, and the power, to share themselves and communicate in different ways. What we have found is that the most important information in the world is inside people. It’s how they’re thinking, how they’re feeling, how they relate to the people around them. And that information isn’t accessible in the world. It’s not out there available to be indexed. It’s only accessible if people choose to share it themselves and have the tools to do so, and that’s what we’re building.
The first version of the web was about putting all the information that existed offline now online. The next version will be about understanding that the web isn’t about sharing information, it’s about people sharing themselves. The full potential of the web is gives power back to the people so that everyone has a voice and can share what is important to them.
When that happens, more information will be available because people had control and chose to share it. The world will be a more transparent place, and this transparency will help us understand each other. It will help us see the good and the bad that we do and help us give each other more feedback to do more good. As the world gets more and more complex, transparency and sharing are key to the world being in harmony. And that’s what we’re all doing – we’re giving people the power to the share themselves and create this world.
This isn’t one organization’s mission. Making the world more transparent and bringing people together is more than any one organization can do. This is what we’re all doing, and we’re doing it together.
Openness is not just about technology.
walk off the stage
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
- Enable developers to build the same social applications outside Facebook.com that they could build inside. Anywhere on the web, desktop, or mobile.
- Give people the power to use their information and their connections to share themselves in any service on the web.
- Give people control of their information wherever they choose to use it.
At Facebook, and with Facebook Connect, we see the future of the social web in three distinct components. Identity, Friends, and Feed.
At Facebook, and with Facebook Connect, we see the future of the social web in three distinct components. Identity, Friends, and Feed.
In the online world, before Facebook, there had never been a way to represent your real identity online.
Back when we first started Facebook at Harvard in a dorm room, we used college .edu email addresses to allow our users to sign up for the site. This gave us a trusted way to identify that our users were in fact real people attending real colleges, with a trusted email address. Because of this, our users represented themselves with their real names, real photos, and real data about their identities.
Over time, your Facebook Profile has become one of the most authentic representations of your real identity in the online world. And, the most trusted way to share yourself with your friends on the internet.
Switch slide >
In the online world, before Facebook, there had never been a way to represent your real identity online.
Back when we first started Facebook at Harvard in a dorm room, we used college .edu email addresses to allow our users to sign up for the site. This gave us a trusted way to identify that our users were in fact real people attending real colleges, with a trusted email address. Because of this, our users represented themselves with their real names, real photos, and real data about their identities.
Over time, your Facebook Profile has become one of the most authentic representations of your real identity in the online world. And, the most trusted way to share yourself with your friends on the internet.
Switch slide >
In the online world, before Facebook, there had never been a way to represent your real identity online.
Back when we first started Facebook at Harvard in a dorm room, we used college .edu email addresses to allow our users to sign up for the site. This gave us a trusted way to identify that our users were in fact real people attending real colleges, with a trusted email address. Because of this, our users represented themselves with their real names, real photos, and real data about their identities.
Over time, your Facebook Profile has become one of the most authentic representations of your real identity in the online world. And, the most trusted way to share yourself with your friends on the internet.
Switch slide >
On many other sites and services on the internet you might have a half-filled out profile, or maybe no information about yourself at all.
And, it likely looks something like this. No profile picture, no real name, and no real information about your. Mostly because you aren’t sure who you are sharing your information with.
With Facebook Connect, you can bring your trusted identity with you, and you can always be sure that it is up to date with Facebook Connect and Dynamic Privacy.
Next Slide >
You’ll see that with Facebook Connect, your real name, real profile picture and real information come with you to the sites of your choosing. And, you can always be sure that it is up t0 date leveraging Facebook Connect and Dynamic Privacy.
With Facebook Connect
The key to sharing data is putting users in control of what they share, where, and with whom.
Login.
Facebook Connect puts the user in control by design
May not seem good for you, but it is
Openness is not just about technology.
So how do these applications help people share information?
At Facebook, the way we think about how all this sharing is through a concept that we call the social graph.
The idea is that in the world, each individual person has friends, family, acquaintances (+ build) – and if you map out all these real connections that people have, (+ build) it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. We call this the social graph – it’s a concept.
The idea is that in the world, every person has friends, family, acquaintances – and if you map out these real connections that people have, it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. (+ build construction of graph) We call this the social graph, and we’re trying to map out as much of the real-world social graph as we can.
The reason for this is that if you look at the connections of the social graph, you’ll see that this is how people already share information in the world. Someone shares something with some of their friends (+ build), and then some of those friends share something with their friends (+ build), and so on. So by mapping out these connections, we can all build products that help people share more easily.
So how do these applications help people share information?
At Facebook, the way we think about how all this sharing is through a concept that we call the social graph.
The idea is that in the world, each individual person has friends, family, acquaintances (+ build) – and if you map out all these real connections that people have, (+ build) it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. We call this the social graph – it’s a concept.
The idea is that in the world, every person has friends, family, acquaintances – and if you map out these real connections that people have, it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. (+ build construction of graph) We call this the social graph, and we’re trying to map out as much of the real-world social graph as we can.
The reason for this is that if you look at the connections of the social graph, you’ll see that this is how people already share information in the world. Someone shares something with some of their friends (+ build), and then some of those friends share something with their friends (+ build), and so on. So by mapping out these connections, we can all build products that help people share more easily.
So how do these applications help people share information?
At Facebook, the way we think about how all this sharing is through a concept that we call the social graph.
The idea is that in the world, each individual person has friends, family, acquaintances (+ build) – and if you map out all these real connections that people have, (+ build) it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. We call this the social graph – it’s a concept.
The idea is that in the world, every person has friends, family, acquaintances – and if you map out these real connections that people have, it forms a massive connected web, or graph, of everyone’s real connections. (+ build construction of graph) We call this the social graph, and we’re trying to map out as much of the real-world social graph as we can.
The reason for this is that if you look at the connections of the social graph, you’ll see that this is how people already share information in the world. Someone shares something with some of their friends (+ build), and then some of those friends share something with their friends (+ build), and so on. So by mapping out these connections, we can all build products that help people share more easily.
One of the core features of Facebook Connect is what we call Friend Linking. Which is essentially the ability to find your friends on sites that you already use, and get them to Connect their Facebook accounts too.
One of the core features of Facebook Connect is what we call Friend Linking. Which is essentially the ability to find your friends on sites that you already use, and get them to Connect their Facebook accounts too.
One of the core features of Facebook Connect is what we call Friend Linking. Which is essentially the ability to find your friends on sites that you already use, and get them to Connect their Facebook accounts too.
One of the core features of Facebook Connect is what we call Friend Linking. Which is essentially the ability to find your friends on sites that you already use, and get them to Connect their Facebook accounts too.