Facebook

Zuckerberg: 9th most powerful in the world

Yes, it seems there are only eight people alive who can stop him in his quest to control precisely everything. Who, of those eight, might be prepared to do it? At No. 1 is President Barack Obama. But he seems pleasantly disposed to Zuckerberg. They’ve even had dinner together.

Facebook: 600,000 account logins compromised every day

Facebook said this week that hackers using stolen username and password credentials try to break into at least 600,000 accounts every day on the mammoth social networking site.

How to Avoid Getting Fired by Facebook

If you like your job and don’t want to get trumped out of it, be careful how you use Facebook or one or the many tools like it. Check out a list of things you should do (or not do) in online venues like Facebook.

Facebook FAIL: Missteps and Shortcomings Revealed [INFOGRAPHIC]

That iPad app’s release must have been the last straw for the company. The result? This hard-hitting infographic smackdown that reveals what WordStream calls “Facebook’s errors in judgment.”

Study: Facebook is not ruining your grades

“You have to spend an inordinate amount of time on Facebook for it to be related to GPA in a way that is shocking,” Junco says.

Find your local Wal-Mart on Facebook [VIDEO]

A new Facebook app designed to give millions of Wal-Mart shoppers information on their favorite and closest Wal-Mart stores nationwide.

Facebook: man arrested because of a status feud

A Texas man is facing battery charges after he hit his estranged New Mexico wife and pulled her hair over her lack of a response to his Facebook status update.

Facebook: new in-line translation tool

This is different from Google’s translation tool — this opt-in service is powered by Microsoft Bing and works on individual posts on Facebook Pages, including comments.

Timelines.com sues Facebook over Timeline feature

Timelines.com, an online social-scrapbooking company is claiming that Facebook’s newest platform product could destroy its livelihood.

Poll: young people OK online slurs

Jaded by the Internet free-for-all, teens and 20-somethings shrug off offensive words and name-calling that would probably appall their parents, teachers or bosses.