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A Web 2.0 entrepreneur counts his blessings

Editor's note: This is part of a series of stories about the recession's effect on the tech industry.

Suleman Ali cashed out just in time.

The 26-year-old, a former Microsoft employee who helped put together the Windows Home Server product, founded a company called Esgut within months of the debut of Facebook's developer platform in May 2007. Esgut is a portfolio of Facebook applications, and a few of them, like Superlatives and Entourage, became genuine viral hits. In April, Ali sold the 12-employee Esgut to the Social Gaming Network, a Silicon Valley company backed by the likes … Read more

Teen sues after suspension for Facebook-hating teacher

Katherine Evans, an 18-year-old from Pembroke Pines, Fla., thought her English teacher, Sarah Phelps, was "the worst teacher I've ever met."

As any fine, young citizen of the 21st century does, she thought it aloud on Facebook.

The principal of Pembroke Pines Charter High School, Peter Bayer, didn't think much of her thoughts. He suspended her for "bullying and cyberbullying harassment towards a staff member.''

So, now that she is all grown up and in college, Evans has decided to sue--with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union. The lawsuit claims that Katherine'… Read more

Facebook crowns top apps. Rafe does, too

I was at the Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., Tuesday night for the FBFund event, where the company bequeathed five $250,000 awards to top Facebook apps from a group of 25 finalists (who each had already won $25,000). Most of the finalist apps were impressive. I talked to the creators of several of them and came up with a few favorites.

But first, Facebook's own winners:

GroupCard, which is a really sweet app that lets you create group greeting cards for your friends. Signers can also chip money in for gifts, and the cards can be … Read more

MySpace 'Connects' with Google for MySpaceID

As part of the Le Web conference in Paris, News Corp.'s MySpace announced that it has taken a deeper plunge into the data portability pool.

The social network has announced its support for Google Friend Connect, which launched in full last week, and is using the standard to help power a new set of tools called the MySpace Open Platform. In conjunction, MySpace has ditched the distinctly unsexy moniker of "Data Availability" in favor of the new sobriquet "MySpaceID" for its universal log-in project. The Open Platform, in addition to MySpaceID, encompasses its OpenSocial-compatible app … Read more

Netvibes gets new layouts and OpenSocial support

At Monday's Le Web 3 conference in Paris, Netvibes announced the launch of its latest version which adds support for Google's OpenSocial and Facebook Connect, alongside several new ways to view widgetized content.

The OpenSocial element may be one of the most interesting aspects, as it's now paired with Netvibe's Universal Widget API, allowing developers to create widgets that can pull information from a user's social network. In the example demoed at the conference, Netvibes showed off a weather widget which displayed the user's weather, along with that of their friends. The user didn'… Read more

In ID platform race, Facebook Connect grabs lead

It has only been a few days since Facebook and Google released their dueling press statements announcing that their identity platforms, Facebook Connect and Friend Connect, respectively, were open to the public.

I still think that Facebook will win this battle. But after I wrote my first posts, I was convinced to modify my early opinion with these qualifiers: it will win in the United States, and in the short term.

In the States, Facebook's trump card is its social network. Google doesn't have a big U.S. social network, though in other countries (India and Brazil, notably), it has a strong presence with Orkut. And only a fool would discount Google in any market for good. In 1999, did anyone expect that the company would someday make a credible mobile-phone operating system?

So how are Facebook and Google doing so far in this battle? I asked both companies to send me a list of users for their identity services. Facebook quickly sent a list, which it claims is only partial, of sites from about 30 companies adopting Facebook Connect. Standouts include CitySearch, CNN.com Forum, TechCrunch, Xobni, MoveOn, and SFGate. To be fair, not all of the sites in the Facebook list have yet integrated the platform into their log-ins.

Getting competitive information from Google was more of a challenge. The list, I can say fairly, was not forthcoming. During a tortured telephone conversation, I was given a poor excuse about why I couldn't get the full list, and then later got a list of seven representative English-speaking sites, plus two in Portuguese, and one Chinese. The top sites on the list: The Inquistr and Go2Web20. The full list is after the jump.

Advantage, so far: Facebook

As I've said previously, Google does not have technically inferior registration platform, by my estimation. But that's not its issue. For users, as least based on what I've seen so far, Facebook Connect can be more straightforward. Logging in via Google's Friend Connect is a little too different from what users may be accustomed to: You sign on in an Open Social widget and join the site as you would do with MyBlogLog. Once you join, other users can see that you're a member.

The advantage Google's widget-based approach has, though, is that it's pretty much the same on all the sites that use Friend Connect. And it gives users the option to sign in via not just a Google ID, but one from Yahoo, AOL, or an OpenID provider.

In the best implementations, logging into a site with Facebook pops up a blue-theme Facebook-branded log-in page. It can be more similar (though not identical) to logging in to any old site the old-fashioned way. And once you're in, your affiliation with the site isn't broadcast to the next hundred visitors to the site. Using Facebook Connect can be a smoother transition for users. … Read more

CNET News Daily Podcast: Recession hits home

In Friday's podcast, corporate raider Carl Icahn recently bought up a lot more stock in his one-time target Yahoo, Facebook employees' internal stock sale gets derailed, Conde Nast cuts back plans for some new Web sites, and the BlackBerry Storm gets an update. Also, as part of an ongoing series about how the recession is affecting the tech industry, CNET News takes a look at how a recently laid-off IT consultant and his family are coping.

Listen now: Download today's podcast

Today's stories:

Icahn goes bargain basement hunting

Facebook delays plan to let employees sell stock

Report: Conde Nast putting site launches on holdRead more

Buzz Out Loud 866: Harsh the mellow

Important revelations on today's show: cigars smell like dog poop, Facebook Connect is going to win, the NFL looks awesome in 3-D, and Barack Obama uses an iPod, not a Zune. Like I said, important. Listen now: Download today's podcast Episode 866

Listener co-host details: E-mail buzz@cnet.com with your name, phone number, preferred time of day (with time zone). We are shooting for doing the interviews next Monday 3-4 p.m. PST and Wednesday 4-5 PST.

Facebook Connect opens up http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10113604-2.html

So does Google Friend Connect http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10113648-2.htmlRead more

Facebook delays plan to let employees sell stock

Facebook employees hoping to cash out some stock options received an unpleasant early Christmas present this week, courtesy of the economic downturn.

In August, Facebook began considering ways to let current employees unload a portion of their shares that had vested by this fall.

But on Thursday, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg notified employees that the plan was on hold. "I'm writing this note to let you know some bad news," he wrote, according to an excerpt posted on Valleywag.com. "Despite a lot of work, we have not been able to finalize a plan for … Read more

Facebook delays employee stock sale

Facebook delayed a plan to let employees sell some of their stock. The plan seemed like a big win for the employees there but with the recession underway and no clear liquidity event in sight, I can't see why or how the company could move forward.

VentureBeat got the low-down:

The global economy is in the midst of an incredibly difficult period, and all companies have been affected in some way. After carefully considering the current environment, we've decided to establish an open-ended timetable for an employee stock sale program. Despite the turbulence in the financial markets and … Read more