The TechCrunch team is on site at the Facebook Developer conference, and we’ll be live blogging the news. Mark Zuckerberg’s Keynote starts at 1:30 pm PST. Facebook’s press release is here. Live Coverage In a press briefing after the keynote, Zuckerberg stated “I wish I knew” when asked when the anticipated payments system would launch. He also hinted […]

The TechCrunch team is on site at the Facebook Developer conference, and we’ll be live blogging the news. Mark Zuckerberg’s Keynote starts at 1:30 pm PST.
Facebook’s press release is here.
Live Coverage
In a press briefing after the keynote, Zuckerberg stated “I wish I knew” when asked when the anticipated payments system would launch. He also hinted that Facebook is working on launching improved search, but they aren’t close to launching it yet.
2:49 PM: That’s it. The show is over.




2:48 PM: Great Apps can integrate with users just like native Facebook apps, and they get early access to features. The Great Apps program is in alpha stage and the first two partners are iLike and Causes. There will be a strong enforcement system with all apps, and they’ll disable apps that are a problem. Over the last year they’ve disabled apps for violation of privacy or other policies. They take this very seriously, he states.

2:47 PM: The second announcement is the Facebook Great Apps Program (Top Tier program). They embody all ten of the guiding principles, and they advance the mission of Facebook.
2:46 PM: They’re announcing two new programs: a verification program is first - this is the lower tier of the two programs. Starting in September they’ll invite apps that are secure, respectful and transparent to apply to be verified. Trusted apps get a special badge in the directory and app page. (we posted on this earlier, here)


2:44 PM: They’ve partnerships with partners to help developer (Microsoft), host and scale. They’re launching a new developer website that gives all the information needed for a quick start. He says 1000 apps have been submitted to the Facebook fund. They’re revealing the names of fbFund’s recipients to date: Challenge, ConnectedWeddings, Podclass, MyListo, Trazzler, Zimride, LuckyCal, Coursefeed, Hotberry, and J2Play.

They are announcing a new competition this day. $2M will be given out over the next two months. Facebook will choose 25 finalists who will each get 25k. Users will vote on finalists who will each get 250k.

2:43 PM: He says they have to keep the ecosystem safe for users and fair for developers. A year ago equal distribution became overwhelming to users, then they made restrictive changes that injured apps. Going forward they will have different rules. They are announcing several programs to help app developers. Get Started Swiftly tools like adding easy FBML tags.

2:42 PM: He states that they’ve learned a lot in the last year, as they’ve had lots of challenges. Facebook is listening to the community. They’re trying to partner more closely with developers. He says they are making organizational changes that let developers incorporate feedback during the dev process, and they’re creating full time community management organization
2:40 PM: “Security is a massive part of it, apps can’t share information with other users unless they obey privacy settings. Apps must also be respectful of the users attention and time. Don’t make users invite 20 friends before you use the app, or spam friends without them knowing. Apps must be very transparent. Users should get what they anticipate when they click, not an interstitial ad. Design is also important - clean design is a must. And apps must be fast loading and responsive. As the apps get faster, users use them more. Apps need to focus on being robust and scaling properly as they grow.”
2:39 PM: “Building trustworthy applications is important because we live in an ecosystem with network effects. If users leave, everyone suffers. Apps must be safe and trusted.”

2:37 PM: He states apps must be useful. The carpool app is great example, which lets users find carpool buddies. “Apps must also be expressive”- The graffiti app that lets users draw on friends profiles, is a good example. Finally, meaningful apps must be engaging. He says Playfish makes games that are highly engaging. Facebook users have played over 900 million minutes of Playfish games. That’s about 1800 years.
2:35 PM: Benjamin is announcing “guiding principles for great applications” which are based on dialog with community. It’s based on three pillars: meaningful, trustworthy and well designed. The ideal apps make use of the social graph. Applications must be social. A good example is the Lil Green Patch app, which helps users fight global warming by interacting with other users.
2:33 PM: Benjamin Ling, Director of Platform Program Management is now on stage talking about the “State of Platform.” He says that over $200m has been invested in Facebook apps, $34m this week alone. Additionally, 13 different ad networks have launched that pay out tens of millions of dollars to app developers. He says, “venture capital, ad networks, developers and academics are the ecosystem that makes Facebook platform a success.”
2:32 PM: Mark wraps things up, that appears to be the end of the announcements.
2:31 PM: Zuckerberg asked all Facebook employees who work on platform to stand up, then asked all app developers to stand up.
2:29 PM: “Give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.” - Facebook’s mission statement
2:28 PM: To recap, he’s talked about new profiles and the highlighting of the news feed, the second item is Facebook Connect. The new profile launched Monday, he says. Facebook Connect will launch developer keys starting today - there will be a beta period.

2:26 PM: That’s it for launch partners. Mark is back on stage.
2:25 PM: A new site will have a “my friends” tab that shows reviews by friends in various cities.
2:23 PM: Mike Philips from Citysearch is taking the stage. He states they’re launching a new site, where sharing information is a huge piece. They are integrating with Facebook Connect. When a user looks for a hotel, restaurant, etc., Citysearch already has lots of reviews and data, but not a way to link up reviews from friends.

2:22 PM: When you login to comment, users can sign in via Movable Type or Facebook. If you sign in with Facebook, it will display changes - light blue boxes outline your friend’s comments.
2:20 PM: David Recordon from Six Apart just took the stage. They’re releasing a plugin for Movable Type that allows people to comment using their Facebook profiles. Users can decide to profiles or keep them private.


2:17 PM: Digg is now allowing people to sign into Digg via Facebook or OpenID. There is no requirement to sign up for a Digg account.
2:15 PM: Launch partners are now coming on stage. First up is Digg by Joe Stump.








2:13 PM: Facebook Connect can show you which of your Facebook friends are also on the outside service, so you can link up with them there too. They are also allowing people to leave comments and requests on third celebration sites.
2:12 PM: Facebook Connect will let applications share data with Facebook. Users can bring Facebook friends with them to outside sites.
2:11 PM: Mark is now speaking about Facebook Connect.
2:10 PM: He states he wants Facebook to be the platform and tools provider, but let apps do anything social they want.
2:08 PM: Mark states we’re going to see the decentralization of social networking into apps on the web. Things will decentralize further, apps can run anywhere on the internet, not just on social network platforms. They will all work together, just be decentralized.
2:05 PM: People (including us) are writing wall posts for Mark since he has his profile live on stage, but it looks like he’s actually using a fake profile, it shows just 8 friends.

2:03 PM: Mark is now showing a live demo of the new home page.

2:02 PM: Mark states they haven’t absolutely gotten rid of app boxes, they’re added a tab for them. Some apps really need them. Users can also add tabs for individual apps.
1:59 PM: He states the apps that leverage the news feed the ideal will be the ones that succeed.
1:58 PM: “The most important part of the profile is the wall and the news feed, which have now been merged. They also give developers an incentive to build apps that let users share a lot of information. This is a lot superior than an application box, which people don’t interact with as much.”
1:56 PM: Mark is now speaking about the new profile pages and how it fits in with their current goals.

1:54 PM: Mark says that over the last year Facebook hasn’t done enough to reward applications that provide a lot of long term value, and they haven’t punished the ones abusing the system.
1:53 PM: Mark is speaking about lessons Facebook has learned. He says that they released the platform as quickly as possible, it wasn’t fully baked yet, and they didn’t anticipate the huge adoption.
1:52 PM: Mark states the most powerful tool on Facebook this day is the News Feed. Traffic went up by 50% when they first launched news feed in late 2006.

1:51 PM: Mark is now speaking about the social graph, a concept he introduced at the first f8 conference.
1:49 PM: LivingSocial just announced they received $5M in Funding, Flixster received $6M from Allen and Company, and Zynga got $29M from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Zuckerberg states, “There has been more than $200 million invested in the ecosystem.”

1:47 PM: David Glazer (Director of Engineering, Friend Connect) is here in the audience (which is about 1500 people), it looks like he’ll announce something. Perhaps they are announcing some kind of agreement.
1:45 PM: “We’re opening up the translation tool to allow apps to be translated as well…We now have more than 400k developers building on top of the platform. The developer community is spread around the world. More than half are outside of the US.

1:43 PM: Mark is now talking about opening up Facebook for translations made by users. They started with Spanish and French, and now the site is available in over 60 languages.

1:41 PM: Mark is looking back over the last year and states it’s been pretty crazy. Over 24 million people were using Facebook a year ago - today they’re at 90 million people.



1:38 PM: Mark says its time to take the Facebook platform to the next level. On a recent vacation he realized (1) they want to build a product that really lets you connect with people, and (2) they want to extend the concept of presence, have more open connections and share more. They want to make the world a more open place
“The most important information is only available if people share it, and have the power and the tools to do so”

1:35 PM: Mark takes the stage and welcomes the crowd.
1:30 PM: Still waiting for Mark Zuckerberg to take the stage.



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