Social networking site
Facebook
is to ditch its requirement that users must have a university email address,
according to media reports.
Facebook required members to have a school or university email address, but
added 1,000 approved work addresses in May allowing students that had graduated
to continue to access the site.
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Removing the need for approved email addresses will put the site in direct
competition with other social networks such as
MySpace,
Bebo and
Friendster.
According to
Forbes,
Facebook planned to ditch approved email addresses today, but has since decided
to delay the introduction owing to the backlash it received from unannounced
upgrades launched last week.
The new features, called News Feed and Mini-Feed, allowed users to view their
friends' recent activity on the site, resulting in over 100,000 members claiming
that the facility breached their privacy.
Facebook introduced new privacy controls as a result of the protests. "The
recent outpouring of positive and negative feedback confirms the passion people
feel for Facebook and its importance in their lives," claimed Facebook founder
and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.
"We think that News Feed and Mini-Feed offer something people cannot find
anywhere else on the internet.
"These additional privacy features put control of who sees what information
in News Feed and Mini-Feed directly in the hands of our users, just as they
requested."
Zuckerberg admitted that the way the new features were introduced was a
mistake. "We really messed this one up," he wrote on the
Facebook
blog.
"When we launched News Feed and Mini-Feed we were trying to provide a stream
of information about your social world.
"Instead, we did a bad job of explaining what the new features were and an
even worse job of giving you control of them. I'd like to try to correct those
errors now."
Colleges
on YouTube requires members to have a .edu email address to sign up for the
service, which are only available to students and faculty members.
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