Author: meattle
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15.4 Million Facebook Application Users in January
Published on the Compete.com blog on 22 Feb 2008
- 15.4 million Facebook users interacted with fb Application pages (@ apps.facebook.com) in January:
- On average ~51% of Facebook’s user base engages with Application pages:
- In January, fb Application pages directly contributed 1.5 billion pages (8.4% of total) to Facebook.com’s total page view count. Given the trend, I expect Application pages to gradually form a larger chunk of Facebook.com’s overall page views over time.
Note: Stats in this post are limited to activity on apps.facebook.com. Most Facebook Applications load pages in iframes from 3rd party (non-facebook) servers. According to sources, users can generate well over >10 page views on 3rd party servers for each one that they see on apps.facebook.com. In January, Compete estimates ~1.5 billion page loads of apps.facebook.com, which translates to roughly 11-12 billion page views across Facebook app iframes.
- 6-month gains in time spent, sessions, and page views generated on apps.facebook.com:
Bottom-line:
This data reinforces the fact that Facebook’s Application strategy and ongoing refinements appear to be working. Now the big question — as Facebook’s unique visitor growth plateaus, what will be their next traffic growth engine? They are still 36 million short of MySpace.com’s 67 million U.S. unique visitors.note: data in this post is U.S. centric, and is limited to activity on apps.facebook.com.
- 15.4 million Facebook users interacted with fb Application pages (@ apps.facebook.com) in January:
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Does Privacy Matter to Most Facebook Users? Let’s look at some data.
Published on the Compete.com blog on 19 February 2008
Does privacy matter to most Facebook users? Take a look at the chart below, and judge for yourself (weekly unique visitors to facebook’s privacy settings pages):
Even after all the recent mainstream media coverage and debate surrounding Facebook’s controversial beacon program, online privacy in general, and Facebook making available universal beacon opt-out — traffic to Facebook’s privacy settings pages has essentially been flat. NOT A GOOD SIGN!
It’s likely that the average Facebook user DOES care about their privacy, and know they should do something about it, but are mostly unaware or don’t know what they can or should do. Should Facebook be doing more around online privacy education? There is a lot of unintended sharing going on, and I think it is in Facebook’s long term best interest to do so.