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Web, Social Networking

Facebook Sorry for Calling Mastectomy Pix 'Sexual and Abusive'

Recently, Facebook banned pictures of a woman showing her mastectomy scars, calling the images "sexual and abusive." For anyone who has seen these pictures, those are not words they inspire.

However, Facebook has taken back its original ban and apologized to Sharon Adams, the poster of the pictures and breast cancer survivor.

After the original decision was made, hundreds of users in the U.K. protested and railed against Facebook. Users even created online groups such as "Get Sharon Adams Picture on Facebook for Breast Cancer," which has over 900 members.

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Web, Social Networking

Facebook Porn Police Clean Up 'Butt, Crack, Nipple' Content

With Facebook's meteoric rise in membership and popularity, the site has been forced to not only tinker with its Terms of Service, but to also address salacious, insulting and otherwise inappropriate messages and pictures. People over the age of 30 have been flocking to the site, and, in order to appeal to this contingent as well as the original audience of college students, administrators are trying to maintain the fun spirit of the site while keeping content inoffensive. To help achieve this goal, Facebook employs 150 "cleaners" whose primary responsibilities involve removing flagged, offensive material.

Newsweek recently spoke with David Axten, one such "porn cop" who enforces "the Fully Exposed Butt Rule, the Crack Rule and the Nipple Rule," as he judged 75 flagged pictures out of the 438,848 waiting to be inspected. David Kirkpatrick, author of the upcoming book 'The Facebook Effect' believes such enforcers play a vital role in Facebook's success because similar networking sites, like MySpace, were "essentially shanghaied by pornography and sexual displays."

While we agree that such steps may be necessary for Facebook to appeal to more sponsors and to a wider audience, the crackdown will likely result in a significant drop in the shady photo-related arrests and firings we do so love to cover. Oh well, it was a fun ride. [From: Newsweek]

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Web, Social Networking

Facebook Takes the KKK's Baby Away

According to Facebook's oft-criticized Terms of Service (TOS), members are not allowed to "post content that is hateful, threatening, pornographic or that contains nudity or graphic or gratuitous violence." After changing its original TOS in February, and then quickly switching back after a mild public uproar, Facebook means to prove that its new-old TOS are to be taken seriously. According to Mashable, a budding group of British racists drew the wrath of the site's administrators by forming a group called 'Isle of Man KKK' which promoted an all-white, immigrant-free Isle of Man.

Last week, Facebook shut down the Ku Klux Klan-inspired group, which had attracted a following of 100 members, including students from each of the island's six secondary (high) schools. The headmaster of one school did tell The Telegraph that his staff had spoken with the students that had joined the group, and determined that they had done so to criticize the group's racist ideals.

Twitter, Facebook, or MySpace?



We applaud Facebook for sticking to its guns and upholding the terms of the site, but a quick search reveals a multitude of KKK-fueled groups. Although most contain a mere spattering of members, it seems there's more work to be done in the fight for Facebook tolerance. So, while the site continues its purge of ignorance, perhaps the unhappy blokes of the Isle of Man will join forces with unwelcome bigots on the Isle of Wight to form their own Isle of White Men. Good riddance. [From: The Telegraph and Mashable]

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Computers

Facebook Admits Defeat, Retracts Terms of Service

Yesterday, Facebook ruffled the feathers on many of its users by issuing a new Terms of Service, or TOS, which some believed gave the site permission to use any content -- profiles, status updates, commentary -- posted on the site perpetually (even if Facebook members deleted their profiles and left the site). Facing a PR backlash of epic proportions, Facebook has now rather publicly reverted to its old TOS.

Facebook or MySpace?



Logging onto your profile this morning shows the following message:
Over the past few days, we have received a lot of feedback about the new terms we posted two weeks ago. Because of this response, we have decided to return to our previous Terms of Use while we resolve the issues that people have raised. For more information, visit the Facebook Blog.

If you want to share your thoughts on what should be in the new terms, check out our group Facebook Bill of Rights and Responsibilities.
It's hardly an apology, making it sound like the company has no idea why anyone would be upset about handing over the rights to their photos forever, but people, of course, were mad. Gossip blogger Perez Hilton isn't cutting the company or its founder Mark Zuckerberg any slack, saying that "Facebook still sucks" and that MySpace is "so much more respectful" -- um, we're not entirely sure of that.

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