Facebook exec: We’re the Net’s cable company

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SANTA CLARA, Calif.–As you might expect from a vice president of product marketing, Facebook’s Chamath Palihapitiya can deliver a convincing sales pitch.

His sell: Facebook is the next-generation platform of the Internet that can turn any ambitious entrepreneur (with the right application) into an overnight success. He rattled off the stats to back up the argument.

The average development time, he said, for an entrepreneur to build a Facebook application is between two and 15 weeks, according to a self-reported survey of its developer community. The average number of employees to make those applications: between one and five people. And about 33 percent of Facebook application makers reported profits of up to $500,000 a month. Finally, at least one-quarter of the applications running on Facebook have 100,000 active daily users.

“The barrier to entry is lower than it’s ever been,” Palihapitiya said to an audience here Saturday at the TieCon conference. “When you build something social, you get immediately rewarded with distribution. You will allow your user base to be your marketers.”

Palihapitiya, a former venture capitalist at the Mayfield Fund and one-time head of AOL’s instant messaging application, knew his audience. TieCon is a two-day conference cut out for technology entrepreneurs; and it attracted as many as 4,000 attendees. But some attendees said that at times, the talk was too wonky (with terms like “social stack”) and heavy on PowerPoint. At least one attendee said that the speech was a “good sell.”

“We view ourselves as a technology company at our core. We’re the cable company creating the pipes, and what they carry is social information and engagement information about people.”

–Chamath Palihapitiya, VP of product marketing, Facebook

Luring more developers to Facebook is essential for the company’s plans to become, as Palihapitiya said, the network operator of the Internet.

“We view ourselves as a technology company at our core. We’re the cable company creating the pipes, and what they carry is social information and engagement information about people,” he said.

“That plumbing should exist around the Internet, and then what happens is that people can create truly social experiences on the Web. As long as we can build the plumbing for this, we view that as a success.”

For example, he talked about and illustrated (via PowerPoint) the so-called social stack, or the elements to create social experiences on the Web. Those include wide distribution on the Internet and being able to securely port your personal identity anywhere online. He said that Facebook is helping people manage their identity with privacy settings. And the company is opening distribution for developers so that their applications will be judged by merit.

“The rules of distribution are changing fundamentally. When you’re an entrepreneur all you need is one person to like it, one person to be an advocate of it, and then their friends find out and engage in that.”

What does Facebook gain from becoming the Internet’s cable company? Palihapitiya didn’t exactly say, but it hinges on all that social data captured about individuals and their friends. He said that developers make money, largely through advertising, without tax from Facebook. And he said Facebook will probably come up with its own products that developers can use to make money, presumably referring to an advertising platform.

Last year, the company backed up its commitment to developers when it introduced the Facebook Fund (or fbFund), which grants up to $250,000 to promising entrepreneurs without asking for equity. (Facebook worked in partnership with Accel and the Founders Fund to launch this initiative.) He said that Facebook has already funded a New York-based Indian couple that is working on a social application for people who are planning to get married and want the help of friends.

In a Nike-esque call to entrepreneurs, he added: “We want you to be empowered to do it.”

Save your Orkut account from getting hacked!!

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Well, first of all my apologies for not posting anything for two days! One of my friend challenged me if I can hack her orkut account.
I don’t know how to hack?
Google uses a 4 Level Orkut login which makes it difficult to hack using brute force method.
1st Level Security-SSL or 128 bit secured connection
2nd Level Google account checks for cookie in the sytem of user
3rd Level Google provides a redirection to the entered User information
4th Level Google doesn’t use conventional php/aspx/asp coding so impossible to attack using input validation attack!!
It is not an easy task to break this security! But still some people manages to get access to other accounts. The question concerned is How they do it? Many of them just use simple tricks that befool users and then they themself leak out their password. Here are some points you need to take care of, to prevent your Orkut account being hacked!

Phishing Attack is the most popular way of stealing other’s password. Popular by the name of fake login (among those who knows it!!) the users land on a page where they are asked for their login information and they enter their username and password thinking it to be a real page but actually it is other way round. It submits all the details entered to the programmer or the coder.

Community Links:
Many times you are provided with a link to a community in a scrap. Read the link carefully, It may be something like http://www.okrut.com/Community.aspx?cmm=22910233 OKRUT not ORKUT. Clicking on this link will take you to a fake login page and there you loose up your password.

Orkut New Features:
I have come across a page that looks like they are giving the user a choice of selecting new features for orkut with your ID and password, of course!! When user submit the page, there goes his ID and password mailed to the coder.

Java script:
You must have seen the circulating scraps that asks you to paste this code in your address bar and see what happens! Well sometimes they also leak out your information. Check the code and if you are unsure of what to do, then I recommend not to use it.

Primary mail address:
If by some means a hacker came to know password of your Yahoo mail or Gmail, which users normally keeps as their primary mail address in their Orkut account, then hacker can hack Orkut account by simply using USER ID and clicking on ‘forget password’.This way Google will send link to the already hacked primary email id to change the password of the Orkut account. Hence the email hacker will change your Orkut account’s password. Hence your Orkut account hacked too.
So a better thing would be to keep a very unknown or useless email id of yours as primary email id so that if the hacker clicks on ‘Forgot password’ the password changing link goes to an unknown email id i.e. not known to the hacker.
Hence your Orkut account saved.

If you would like to share something, comment here and I will add up here with a credit to your name.