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Showing posts with label Social Messaging Section. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Messaging Section. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 January 2015

Facebook at Work app aims for role in the office

Facebook at Work

The new app resembles Facebook's main product, but keeps posts private within a specific company
Facebook is launching a new app that aims to expand the US firm's presence within companies and other places of work.
The software is designed to provide a way for users to communicate as an alternative to email and other intranet systems.
The firm says information posted within the service is kept "secure, confidential and completely separate" from personal Facebook profiles.
The move poses a challenge to LinkedIn.
The work-focused social network recently announced its own plan to release a new app to help co-workers share information.
Facebook's move also threatens other established collaboration tools targeted at businesses including Yammer - which Microsoft bought for $1.2bn (£788m) in 2012 - Jive and MangoApps.Email overload
Facebook at WorkThe service is designed to help avoid important messages being missed because of email overload
Facebook already has about 1.4 billion people using its platform at least once a month, but it is currently blocked in some workplaces.
The Menlo Park, California-based firm suggested one advantage it had over rival work communication tools was that people were already familiar with the way it worked, meaning firms could save on training costs.
Many companies are keen to adopt such software because of complaints that a deluge of messages has made email a poor tool to keep in touch with.
"Facebook at Work is a separate experience that gives employees the ability to connect and collaborate efficiently using Facebook tools - many that they're likely already using such as News Feed, Groups, messages and events," the social network said in a statement.
"The information shared among employees is only accessible to people in the company."
A spokeswoman added: "Internally at Facebook we've been using our product for years, and we're now looking forward to the feedback from our pilot partners to create the best possible experience."
One industry watcher said the move was no surprise.
"If you look how popular things like Yammer have already been, that shows that there is definitely an appetite for a business skew of Facebook itself," said Chris Green, principal technology analyst at Davies Murphy Group Europe.
"Yammer already has a lot of the look, feel and functionality of Facebook, so it is a logical thing for Facebook to follow Yammer into the marketplace."
YammerMicrosoft says Yammer is already used by more than 200,000 companies worldwide
Advert-free
For now, the Facebook at Work app is free-to-use, but limited to an unnamed group of companies that will trial its use.
At this stage the work version will not feature adverts, nor will it gather data about its users that could be sold on to third parties.
"Businesses would be concerned if it became ad-supported with information shared for context-driven marketing posts - that would be a no-no for a lot of companies on data protection grounds," commented Mr Green.
"Companies would probably be happier paying a subscription fee - as is the case with Yammer - and having an ad-free closed environment that they can keep total data control over."
Facebook responded: "It's too early discuss future plans around ads or monetisation."

Wednesday, 31 December 2014

Yahoo! turns on HTTPS encryption for Mail by default

CES 2014: Yahoo! turns on HTTPS encryption for Mail by default
As promised last year, Yahoo! has managed to turn on HTTPS by default for all Yahoo! Mail exchanges. The encryption also found a mention in CEO Marissa Mayer’s CES keynote speech at Las Vegas.
Now when you send or receive mails on Yahoo! Mail, your exchanges will automatically be encrypted by default and protected with 2,048 bit certificates. Jeff Bonforte, Senior VP of Communication Products at Yahoo! announced the feature with a blog post today.
MAUs on the rise
Encrypted
He went on to mention that anytime you use Yahoo’s Mail services, whether it is on the web, mobile web, mobile apps or even via IMAP, POP or SMTP, it will remain completely encrypted. This encryption will not just remain limited to your mails but also extend itself to your attachments, contacts, calendar and the Messenger in the Mail.
“Security is a key focus for us and we’ll continue to enhance our security technology and policies so we can provide a safe and secure experience for our users,” he wrote. In November last year, Yahoo! had announced its intentions to protect user privacy on its services, especially against the snooping activities carried out by the NSA.
“We’ve worked hard over the years to earn our users’ trust and we fight hard to preserve it,” wrote Marissa Mayer in an earlier blog post. She said that while over the previous six months reports of the US government secretly accessing user data without the knowledge of tech companies had been cropping up, Yahoo! reiterated that it had never taken part in it. Neither the NSA nor any other government agency was given access to Yahoo’s data centres ever, she had asserted.
Now only if the Mail client itself could be fixed for a better performance.