a number of days ago, Facebook quietly changed their friend rejection procedure. As opposed to opting to Ignore, you could now only defer the put-down by clicking Not Now. But those purgatoried people can still read your entire public info and updates.
As TechCrunch observes , when someone sends you a pal request they get immediate access to the guidelines that you just’ve designated as available to Everyone for your privacy settings. After they’re rejected, they’re blocked for good. But by creating this friendship limbo, Facebook is creating a Twittteresque follow feature.
You can still deny friend requests outright; it just takes an additional step. If you’ve said Not Now to a request, you’re asked ” Don’t you know ______?,” and whenever you say no they’ll be blocked. Once you don’t say no right then, it’s important to head on your Requests page to block them.
With any luck, you’ve already made your privacy settings strict enough that this won’t be a subject matter for you. But that’s not who this policy change is targeting; Facebook’s banking that when you’re lazy, uninformed, or exhibitionist enough leave your info exposed to the area, you’ll be equally so when coping with friend requests.
Three quick thoughts. One, it sort of feels like a sneaky, backdoor approach to add a follow function that they might have just announced as an opt-in feature. Two, that being said, just edit your privacy settings already. Three, I’m guessing this wouldn’t happen on Diaspora . [ Inside Facebook TechCrunch ]
Samsung demos new 32nm quad-core Exynos prior to MWC
LG’s upcoming MWC lineup runs into some Italians, gets documented on video



