Needless to say, but this would be illegal in the European Union. Unsolicited text messages and all that. If this is true, facebook should be very careful about doing it in EU.
This article is kind of only half-thought through. Facebook is making contact to the user on behalf of this person that claims to be 'advancetehri', it is not a 'cold' invite by Facebook. This user 'advancetehri' used the invite a user feature and put this person's number in.
Evil plan to grab new users? No.
I feel like a vast majority of people take every single chance they get to argue that Facebook is out to get them.
Guess your comment is actually half-thought. I'm the person this blog post is talking about. And I'm pretty sure, I (and none of us in my family) even remotely know this 'advancetehri' guy. And who the hell has a name like that?
Also, when I clicked that link and when @iambibhas clicked that link, we both got immediate friend request from 'advancetehri'. (We blurred the link because it exposes the full phone number to anyone who clicks it) Rings a bell?
There's definitely a pile-on effect happening. Consider that story about click fraud a few weeks back. As far as I can tell click fraud isn't any worse on Facebook than it is on any other ad network, but they took a disproportionate amount of heat.
They are looking a for a positive spin they can give to wall-street. If they release new stats on user growth still exploding to wall-street, that might reduce the hammering of their stocks. Sheer desperation as tough times call for desperate measures.
As of the FB app on my iPhone, when I wanted to connect it with my phones data (to get extra phone numbers of my friends, and see their profile pics), I was asked to agree that the app can upload the data to FB and let them use it whatever way they want to. (Read: all the phone numbers in my phone, not in the FB app.) That really blew my mind. I didn't agree, but if 500 people have your phone number in their phones, the chance that none of them agrees is zero.
This is the only way the number could've slipped into Facebook servers. Still, sending fake friend request SMSes to the user when they don't even have an fb account is totally unethical.
[+] [-] EricBurnett|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] iambibhas|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rmc|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] maybesofast|13 years ago|reply
Evil plan to grab new users? No.
I feel like a vast majority of people take every single chance they get to argue that Facebook is out to get them.
[+] [-] rish404|13 years ago|reply
Also, when I clicked that link and when @iambibhas clicked that link, we both got immediate friend request from 'advancetehri'. (We blurred the link because it exposes the full phone number to anyone who clicks it) Rings a bell?
Evil plan to grab new users? Yes.
[+] [-] eli|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] throwa|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] zupa|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rish404|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dsirijus|13 years ago|reply
Cool that it works when THEY need it.