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Facebook launches APIs in bid to boost apps

Jonathan Skillings CNET News

Published: 09 Feb 2009 13:33 GMT

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Facebook is looking to unleash a new wave of applications to get its users creating and sharing more content.

The social-networking company has launched a number of APIs (application programming interfaces) that will let developers access content and methods for sharing in Facebook apps including Status, Notes, Links and Video.

According to a post on the Facebook developers blog on Friday evening: "Specifically, your applications can now directly access all of a user's status, links and notes via new methods and FQL calls. Your application will have access to any status, notes or links from the active user or their friends that are currently visible to the active user. In addition, we're opening new APIs for you to post links, create notes, or upload videos for the current user, and we've made setting a user's status easier."

In announcing the move towards greater openness, Facebook says it has seen "increasing engagement" among its users, more than 15 million of whom are updating their status daily and who are sharing more than 24 million links per month. The social network has 150 million active members.

Earlier this week, Facebook gave another nod toward openness, rather unexpectedly joining the board of the OpenID Foundation, whose designs on a universal log-in standard are something of a rival to the similar Facebook Connect.

Credit: Facebook makes new push for more apps from CNET News

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