New This Week on the Inside Network Job Board: Kubra, Acquinity Interactive, 24 MAS and More

The Inside Network Job Board is dedicated to providing you with the best job opportunities across social and mobile application platforms.

Here are this week’s highlights from the Inside Network Job Board, including positions at KubraAcquinity InteractiveNatural Motion Games24MAS Group6waves LolappsSocial Point50 Cubes and Jana.

Listings on the Inside Network Job Board are distributed to readers of Inside Social Games, Inside Facebook and Inside Mobile Apps through regular posts and widgets on the sites. Your open positions are being seen by the leading developers, product managers, marketers, designers, and executives in the Facebook Platform and social gaming industry today.

Facebook Roundup: Menlo Park HQ, 2011 App and Shoutlet’s UK Office

Facebook Moves to New Menlo Park HQ -Facebook recently completed its move to the new Menlo Park, Calif. headquarters. The campus consists of 10 buildings, 1 million square feet total, will house 2,000 employees and eventually 9,400. This concludes a three-phase move the company started in August.

Facebook’s Moment of 2011 App – Facebook has created an app to memorialize 2011 for users. The app, Facebook Moment of 2011, allows users to share their most memorable moments of 2011 with users on the company’s Page.

Shoutlet Opens UK Office – Shoutlet announced this week the opening of its European office in the United Kingdom.

Facebook Releases Chat Client for Windows

Facebook now offers a desktop chat application for Windows. Like the company’s standalone mobile app, it is called Facebook Messenger, but the Windows client includes notifications and Ticker to drive users back to the site.

Ticker, a lightweight version of News Feed, has included Sponsored Stories since November. A Facebook spokesperson has confirmed Ticker in the Windows application will function as it does on Facebook.com. Though whether these ads are shown on the website or a desktop client could have different effects on clickthrough rates. As Facebook reviews adoption and engagement of the new app, it will also have to consider ad performance.

The social network is continuing to make its messages product available wherever users might want it. By developing a means of communication that works across devices, Facebook can become the default service people choose to contact each other.

In November 2010, the company began to integrate Facebook messages, chat, SMS and email in such a way that all the conversation between two people, regardless of medium, shows in a single thread. For instance, one user can send a message from the mobile Messenger app that will reach another user who is using chat on Facebook.com. That person can reply from there and the other user can later access the message from the web or mobile inbox. The new desktop client adds another element to this ecosystem.

Messenger for Windows is in a trial period for a small group of people, according to the Help Center where the download link is available.

Romney Makes Major Gains This Week on Inside Facebook’s Election Tracker

Mitt Romney saw a surge of new Facebook fans between yesterday and today, according to our Inside Facebook 2012 Election Tracker. We have not heard back from Romney’s campaign whether the growth is the result of an ad buy.

Pundits and polls suggest Romney is favored to win in Iowa on Tuesday. His daily Facebook growth had been lower than Ron Paul’s since December 3rd, but Romney edged Paul on Monday and then shot up today with 6,088 new page Likes.

After slower growth last week, Paul’s daily new fan count picked up again. He is currently No. 2 in most polls.

Rick Santorum’s Facebook page also made big gains since Tuesday. Santorum had been earning fewer than 200 Likes per day since mid-December, but saw 1,012 fans between yesterday and today.

Newt Gingrich, who had a small burst of new fans last Friday, only averaged about 375 Likes per day this week. Gingrich has been facing direct attacks on a number of fronts, including TV spots from Pro-Romney Super PAC Restore Our Future, and has fallen in steeply in recent polls.

Facebook’s Mobile Presence Spikes After Christmas

The annual uptick in app downloads and new device activations around Christmas has translated into big mobile gains for Facebook.

During the holidays the social network’s apps climbed to the top of the iOS and Android charts, with both Facebook’s standalone Facebook Messenger app and mobile app seeing noticeable spikes in downloads after Christmas according to AppData. The apps are currently the #1 and #9 most popular free iPhone apps.

The story is similar on Android, and as of today, Facebook Messenger and Facebook for Android are the #1 and #2 most popular free Android apps.

 

The numbers are a nice cap to the year for Facebook, which focused heavily on its mobile strategy in 2011. Mobile companies accounted for more than half of the acquisitions Facebook made this year and one of those companies — Beluga, which the network bought in March — developed the social network’s standalone messenger app.

Facebook also finished the year with more mobile users than ever, according to Enders Analysis analyst Benedict Evans, who estimates that the social network’s mobile apps now have more than 300 million MAU. Unsurprisingly, the iOS and Android versions of Facebook’s apps account for the lion’s share of its mobile userbase. Approximately 117 million people log in to Facebook’s mobile app every month from an iOS device and 87.8 million from an Android device. In addition, almost half of all Android and iOS device owners have installed Facebook’s mobile apps.

This story originally appeared on our sister site, Inside Mobile Apps.

Facebook Hires and Departures: Engineering, Data Center, Logistics and More

Facebook hired a several engineers this week, some data center and logistics staff, as well as sales and HR employees, according to posts now removed from its Careers Page. The company’s LinkedIn feed showed that more engineering staff, as well as a product specialist, were also hired.

New hires per LinkedIn and Other Sources:

  • Joyce Tang, Product Specialist – formerly a Team Lead at Facebook.
  • Leonardo Piacentini, Site Reliability Operations Engineer – formerly worked as an  Associate IT Officer at UNHCR.

Prior listings now removed from the Facebook Careers Page:

  • Application Development Engineer (Infra)
  • Front End Engineer, Infrastructure
  • Software Engineer, Generalist
  • Software Engineer, Generalist (Seattle)
  • Software Engineer, Systems Engineering (Seattle)
  • Software Engineer, Systems Engineering (Seattle)
  • Data Center Project Controls Specialist
  • University, Security Engineer, Security Operations (Menlo Park)
  • Technology Partner, Infrastructure
  • Logistics Program Manager
  • Technical Program Managers 1111003 (Menlo Park)
  • HR Specialist – Contract
  • Analyst, Online Sales Operations – German (Dublin)
  • Executive Assistant

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

The Year in Facebook Acquisitions

Facebook’s acquisitions in 2011 suggest a strong focus on mobile technology and talent, as six of the 11 startups acquired this year had previously been working on mobile ventures.

In September, Facebook announced it had 350 million monthly active users accessing its services through mobile devices. This was 100 million more than it had said were active on mobile in March. As the social network introduced a mobile app platform to third-party developers in October, we expect it to continue to build its expertise in this area next year.

Rel8tion – January

The stealth hyper-local mobile advertising startup was acquired and brought into Facebook’s Seattle office. The social network hasn’t yet announced plans to bring ads to its mobile experience, but there have been reports that this could happen before Spring 2012.

Pursuit – February

Facebook hired two of the three founders of this professional network startup that helps employers promote job openings by using their employees’ social networks. So far we haven’t seen Facebook add more professional networking tools, though there are several third-party job apps growing on the platform.

Beluga – March

Five months after Facebook acquired this group messaging startup, the social network released a standalone messaging app that has been one of iOS’ top free apps since it debuted. The success of Messenger could encourage Facebook to develop more standalone apps, for instance one for quick photo-sharing.

Snaptu – March

After partnering with the Israeli startup earlier in the year to bring the app to 2,500 different kinds of mobile devices, Facebook brought the team on presumably to continue to build smartphone-like experiences on basic feature phones.

Recrec – April

This was a talent acquisition, rather than a a traditional acquisition, but most of the founding team of Dogpatch Labs-incubated startup Recrec joined Facebook. Recrec had been developing technology that automatically converted images into HTML and CSS.

Daytum – April

When Facebook hired the two founders of this New York-based startup, we suggested the new employees could help the social network track and visualize activity such as photo uploads, checkins or wall posts. As it turns out, the new monthly and yearly summary boxes on Timeline look a lot like Daytum, which lets people manually enter data such as trips to the gym, films watched or food consumed.

Sofa – June

The social network acquired this Dutch development and design startup for its talent, not its software products, which include Kaleidoscope for tracking differences in text and images, Versions for code version control, and ecommerce platform Enstore.

Digital Staircase – November

Facebook fueled speculation about a possible standalone photo-sharing app when it acquired Digital Staircase, maker of a handful of photo and video editing apps, including MovieCam.

MailRank – November

The social network picked up two former directors of engineering of Second Life-maker Linden Lab in a talent acquisition of MailRank this fall. It did not provide details about what the pair would be working on.

WhoGlue – November

Unlike others, this acquisition was not for talent. Facebook bought Baltimore-based social networking software firm WhoGlue Inc, a company it had sued for patent infringement two years ago. The renamed WhoGlue LLC continues to develop private social networks for its clients.

Gowalla – December

Most recently, Facebook brought Austin-based Gowalla co-founders and other key team members to Palo Alto to work on product and engineering. The social network did not acquire Gowalla technology. The location-based service will be closing sometime in January, according to a blog post by co-founder Josh Williams.


Image credit: Gowalla

Facebook Careers Postings: Engineering, Marketing, Advertising and More

Facebook posted more engineering jobs this week on its Careers Page, as well as marketing and advertising positions. One more job was posted on its LinkedIn feed for small and medium-sized business growth.

Posts added this week on Facebook’s Careers Page:

  • Software Engineer, Infrastructure (Seattle)
  • Software Engineer, Data Center Infrastructure Management
  • Software Engineer, Infrastructure (Seattle)
  • Analyst, SMB Growth – German (Dublin)
  • Manager, Sales & Account Management – Global Marketing Solutions (Sao Paulo)
  • Lead HR COE Process Administrator
  • State Tax Manager
  • Associate, Ad Operations (Austin)
  • Associate, Advertising Operations (Seoul) Korea
  • Associate, Advertising Operations (Sydney) Australia
  • Associate, Advertising Operations (Tokyo) Japan

Jobs posted by Facebook on LinkedIn:

Who else is hiring? The Inside Network Job Board presents a survey of current openings at leading companies in the industry.

Scammers Turn to Affiliate Marketing Scams After Facebook Cracks Down on Clickjacking and XSS

Facebook frauders have figured out how to double their fun and are increasingly using scams to fuel affiliate marketing scams, according to a new report from Internet security firm Commtouch.

Earlier this year Clickjacking and self-XSS (users being tricked into running malicious code that would hijack their information) were a major headache for the social network. In May, Facebook introduced new security features such as additional login authentication options and Like confirmations specifically to combat the problem. Most browsers also updated to make it harder to execute XSS attacks, and as a result, scammers have turned their attention elsewhere.

According to Commtouch’s year-end Internet Threats Trend Report, 74% of Facebook attacks now lead to affiliate marketing sites. Once on the site, users are prompted to sign up to receive a fake free gift, earning the scammers affiliate bonuses for traffic and often providing them with personal data for identity theft. The rest of the scams are either hoaxes, defacement, malware attacks or Like collection with no clear purpose.

The tactics scammers most commonly employ to trick users into visiting a site, adding an app or liking something are probably familiar to anyone who spends time on the social network — users are either offered free goods, lured in with sensational headlines, called to action to see some sort of amazing video or told to install an app. Overall the most used tactic in 2011 was the “must see this” lure, accounting for 36% of all scams. Between June and December the free goods offer increased in popularity, mirroring the rise of affiliate marketing scams. More than 26% of scams now originate from an offer for free goods.

The most common vector for Facebook scams are now users themselves, with 48% spreading through Likes and shares. Clickjacking accounted for 24% of scams, rogue apps 16% and malware and self-XSS 12%.

For its part, Facebook now scans almost 2 trillion link clicks and blocks more than 220 million posts and messages with malicious links every day. The social network has greatly cracked down on fake applications, and Commtouch found Facebook has improved the speed at which new scams are detected and removed. The entire Commtouch report can be found here.

The Year in Facebook Page Management

Page owners saw a number of improvements in the design and features available for their marketing and community-building efforts this year. The social network eliminated a few features, but these moves seemed to be in favor of promoting engagement and avoiding spam.

Redesign

Facebook redesigned pages in February to include a photo strip above the Wall. Many pages have used this as an opportunity to show off their creativity and increase branding. In October, pages became even more visual when the social network made photos up to four times larger within posts. This led some pages to start posting images including large text. Since Facebook had also begun displaying the number of times a post was shared, some pages saw a viral effect from this strategy.

Moderation Tools

This year Facebook introduced several features that help page owners manage their communities. A long awaited notification system was put in place in February. Since then, notifications have become even easier to access from multiple areas of the site, including the homepage. The social network began automatically hiding posts and comments it suspected to be spam or those that include words that page owners add to a blacklist. This reduces the effort admins must take to maintain quality on their pages.

The social network also added a “Use Facebook as a Page” feature  that allows admins to initiate conversation and respond to posts on other pages. So far, this seems to be used more by individuals and small businesses than major brands. People can also post as their pages through Facebook’s comment plugin that many sites have implemented this year.

Fan Engagement

A few user-facing changes created new ways for people to interact with pages. The Questions feature, launched in March, gave page owners a way to ask structured questions that gained viral reach through the News Feed.

A recommendations box on pages that [includeS] an address allow users to share their opinions about a location or a business. Writing a recommendation generates a story in the News Feed, and friends’ recommendations stay pinned to the top of pages as a way to influence other users.

One change page owners have mixed feelings about is that people no longer have to Like a page in order to comment on it or mention it in a post. Many page owners would prefer to build their audience by requiring users to become a fan in order to interact there. From a user perspective, this is a welcome change because people do not always want to subscribe to a page’s updates or indicate to their friends that they “like” something simply because they have a comment or question. And as page owners begin to focus more on the “Talking About This” metric than Likes, this can be seen as a positive move.

New Insights

In October, Facebook overhauled its Insights product for pages, adding new social metrics about the number of users reached through organic, paid and viral means, as well as data about how many users clicked on posts or shared it with friends in some way. The additional information and graphs are a step in the right direction, but many page owners will need further guidance to understand how to take actions to improve and measure success.

The social network flirted with real-time insights in January, but the feature was inconsistent and eventually scrapped. Reach and People Talking About This for individual posts are available to admins after about a day.

Eliminated Features

In April, Facebook removed the option for fans to send page suggestions to their friends. Users could previously send direct invitations for others to Like a page. To reduce what some users would consider spam, the company took the feature away from fans, but left it for admins. Fans can still use the Share button to post a link to the page or write a recommendation that their friends can see.

With the new Messages, page updates — direct messages sent to all fans — were often relegated to the Other folder few users knew of or bothered to check. Even before this change, page updates had low open rates so Facebook eventually scrapped the feature in September. Some page owners saw this as the social network working against them.

The Discussions tab application was removed at the end of October. For a few pages, these were active areas for fans, but because Discussions lacked notifications, they were difficult to moderate and generally went unused. Facebook eliminated them to encourage more activity on the Wall. The Wall, however, is not organized by topic as Discussions could be and posts are more easily lost in the stream. This will be an issue for the company to address next year, possibly with a redesign to make pages more similar to Timeline.

Facebook also eliminated the option for automatic feed syndication through the Notes app. Some pages shared news or blog posts by syncing an RSS feed with Notes. To encourage page owners to customize posts for their fans, the company got rid of this functionality.

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