When Mark E. Zuckerberg ’06 grew impatient with the creation of an
official universal Harvard facebook, he decided to take matters into his
own hands.
After about a week of coding, Zuckerberg launched
thefacebook.com last Wednesday afternoon. The website combines elements
of a standard House face book with extensive profile features that allow
students to search for others in their courses, social organizations
and Houses.
“Everyone’s been talking a lot about a universal face
book within Harvard,” Zuckerberg said. “I think it’s kind of silly that
it would take the University a couple of years to get around to it. I
can do it better than they can, and I can do it in a week.”
As of
yesterday afternoon, Zuckerberg said over 650 students had registered
use thefacebook.com. He said that he anticipated that 900 students would
have joined the site by this morning.
“I’m pretty happy with the
amount of people that have been to it so far,” he said. “The nature of
the site is that each user’s experience improves if they can get their
friends to join it.”
But Director of Residential Computing Kevin
S. Davis ’98 said that the creation of a Harvard facebook was not as far
off as Zuckerberg predicted.
“There is a project internally with
computer services to create a facebook,” Davis said. “We’ve been in
touch with the Undergraduate Council, and this is a very high priority
for the College. We have every intention of completing the facebook by
the end of the spring semester.”
Davis said that the principle
complication with the creation of an official facebook was figuring out
how to design an interface so that directory information could not
easily be compiled without authorization.
Zuckerberg’s site allows
people with Harvard e-mail addresses to upload their pictures and
personal and academic information. Just as with the popular website
Friendster, which Zuckerberg said was a model for his new website,
members can search for people according to their interests and can
create an online network of friends.
Lisa H. Feigenbaum ’04 said
that she joined thefacebook.com because it provided an open alternative
to the password-protected House facebooks.
“If there was a
situation where you needed to identify someone for an organization or a
meeting, it would be very helpful,” she said.
Zuckerberg said
that the most innovative feature of the site is that people can search
for other students in their classes so that they can branch out to form
friendships and study groups.
“If you’re in a class where you
don’t vknow anyone and want to ask somebody for help, this is a way to
find out the names of people in that class,” said thefacebook.com user
Roberto C. Acosta ’05.
Zuckerberg said that the extensive search
capabilities are restricted by a myriad of privacy options for members
who do not want everyone to be able to look up their information.
“There
are pretty intensive privacy options,” he said. “You can limit who can
see your information, if you only want current students to see your
information, or people in your year, in your house, in your classes. You
can limit a search so that only a friend or a friend of a friend can
look you up. People have very good control over who can see their
information.”
Zuckerberg said that he hoped the privacy options
would help to restore his reputation following student outrage over
facemash.com, a website he created in the fall semester.
Using
without permission photos from House facebooks, Facemash juxtaposed the
pictures of two random Harvard undergraduates and asked users to judge
their physical attractiveness. The website drew the ire of students and
administrators alike, and Zuckerberg shut it down within days of the
initial launch.
In addition to the privacy options, Zuckerberg
added security features to thefacebook.com that he said will ensure that
only the owner of a particular Harvard e-mail account can upload
information to the website.
When a person registers to join
thefacebook.com, a program checks to make sure that the name of the
prospective member matches up with the entered e-mail address. Next, a
confirmation message is sent to the e-mail account, and the account is
finally activated if and when the owner of the account clicks on an
encrypted link back to thefacebook.com.
Zuckerberg said that he
was also careful to avoid the potential copyright infringement charges
that landed him before the Administrative Board after the creation of
Facemash.
“Facemash was a joke, it was funny, but at its root it
had its problems—not only the idea, but the implementation. It was
distributing materials that were Harvard’s. I was very careful with
[thefacebook.com] to make sure that people don’t upload copyrighted
material,” he said.
Davis said that thefacebook.com is not necessarily in violation of any Harvard rules.
“There’s
nothing inherently wrong with a third party site on which students
choose to create a personal network,” Davis said. “If there was a third
party site on which students uploaded course syllabi or videos, that
could potentially become a property issue with the University.”
Zuckerburg said thefacebook.com has no such capabilities and does not violate University rules.
While
Zuckerberg promised that thefacebook.com would boast new features by
the end of the week, he said that he did not create the website with the
intention of generating revenue.
“I’m not going to sell
anybody’s e-mail address,” he said. “At one point I thought about making
the website so that you could upload a resume too, and for a fee
companies could search for Harvard job applicants. But I don’t want to
touch that. It would make everything more serious and less fun.” (dd)
Admin
Sabtu, 19 Mei 2012
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Tahukah Anda bahwa pada awalnya Facebook terinspirasi oleh Friendster?
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On: 5/19/2012 07:40:00 AM
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