Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Facebook hits back at Google+ with ‘Facebook for Business’

Add as a preferred source on Google
facebook_like_button_blue_logo
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Just as Google+ has been busy shutting down company profile accounts for violating their user policy, Facebook announced Tuesday its launch of Facebook for Business (facebook.com/business), a webpage that provides directions for how to use the social network’s organization-centric resources.

As Colleen Taylor at GigaOm reports, Facebook for Business does not include any new features. Instead, it simply makes it easier for business to use the wide variety of social networking services that have long been available to them through Facebook.

Recommended Videos

“Facebook allows small businesses to create rich social experiences, build lasting relationships and amplify the most powerful type of marketing — word of mouth,” a Facebook spokesperson told GigaOm via email. “We created Facebook.com/business to make it even easier for people to reach these objectives and grow.”

The services Facebook provides to businesses include: pages, which are user profiles for organizations; advertisements, which appear in a sidebar on users’ profiles; sponsored stories, which are a different kind of ad that appears in a user’s News Feed when one of their friends “likes’ a business’ page; and platform, which helps businesses create Facebook apps and use the site’s social plugins.

While none of these services are news in and of themselves, Facebook’s timing for launching the new business help section certainly appears to be a hit back at Google, which has stolen the social networking spotlight in recent weeks, despite its decidedly mismanaged rollout of business profiles on Google+.

Neither the launch of Facebook for Business nor Google+’s sluggish handling of business profiles will likely have much affect on the long-term battle for social networking dominance. Google+ is certainly growing at an impressive rate — it is estimated to have passed 20 million users in under 30 days — but Facebook remains leagues larger, with 750 million users in its ranks, most of whom are probably not paying much attention to any of these minor corporate spats.

Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
YouTube is coming for celebrity deepfakes with new AI likeness detection tech
Celebrity deepfakes are in YouTube’s crosshairs with new AI detection tools
Phone in hand showing YouTube logo

YouTube is cracking down on celebrity deepfakes, and this time around, it is not just talking about the problem in vague platform-safety terms. In a new blog post, YouTube announced that it is expanding its likeness detection technology to the entertainment industry.

So now, the tools will be accessible to talent agencies and management companies for the celebrities they represent. This tool works in a way that is similar to Content ID, but rather than matching copyrighted media, it looks for AI-generated content using a person's likeness and gives eligible participants the ability to find that content and request removal.

Read more
Meta wants you to pay for WhatsApp now, and it’s already testing the waters
WhatsApp

WhatsApp has been free for over a decade, but Meta is starting to change that. The company is testing a paid subscription tier called WhatsApp Plus, and if you haven't heard about it yet, you probably will soon. The rollout was first spotted by WABetaInfo, and Meta's own Help Center page has since confirmed some of the details. 

So, what do you actually get?

Read more
Tinder wants to check your humanity by gazing into an orb. Yes, you read that right
Staring into an orb to prove you are human is no longer science fiction.
tinder-world-id-human-verification

Online dating is already a trust minefield, and now Tinder wants to add an eyeball scan to the mix. The popular dating app has announced a global partnership with World, the biometric identity company founded by OpenAI's Sam Altman. To prove you are a real human on Tinder, you will soon have the option to get your eyes scanned by a physical orb device.

What is World ID and how does Tinder's human verification work?

Read more