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Added on the 28/03/2018 11:06:51 - Copyright : Wochit
Jordan Nabigon is the CEO of the content curation site Shared. He was a big Facebook customer, spending nearly $46 million in ads on the site. That is, until the platform booted him without warning or explanation. According to Business Insider, Facebook says Shared violated the site's terms and conditions. However, it wouldn't explain what the violations were. Nabigon says several of Shared's pages have been unpublished since October 26, taking 21 million of the company's followers with them. He added that Facebook gave him no warning that they could or would unpublish his pages, and that Facebook told him the decision was final. Business Insider reports Facebook has also locked Nabigon out of his personal account.
Protestors from the pressure group Avaaz demonstrate outside Portcullis House in London where Facebook's Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer is being questioned by members of parliament. IMAGES
Google has a matter of weeks to address four antitrust issues identified by EU antitrust regulators. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg married longtime girlfriend Priscilla Chan. Microsoft will ditch the Aero user interface in Windows 8. Twitter alerted users in an email Sunday about changes to its privacy policy and service usage.
Facebook's isn't free, you're paying with personal information. With the new changes in the privacy policy coming next year, has the cost become to high, or should you get over it?
Hundreds pray outside the Jamia Masjid mosque in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi on Eid al-Fitr - the Muslim festival that marks the end of Ramadan. IMAGES
Two days after a shooting took place at a school in Vantaa, north of Finland's capital Helsinki, a police officer takes down the police cordon that had surrounded the school grounds. Finland is still reeling from the shock of the shooting, in which a 12-year-old boy is suspected of killing a classmate and wounding two girls after opening fire at the Viertola school. IMAGES