Opinion: Facebook e-mail service expected Monday
PC World - Hey, Facebook fans, rumor has it you may be getting e-mail addresses ending with "@facebook.com" as early as Monday.
It's a thought that likely has privacy advocates cringing as even more user data would fall under the control of the world's largest social network.
The rumored service wouldn't be just an updated version of Facebook's currently pathetic in-box, either, but an actual Web mail client to compete with services such as Gmail and Hotmail, says TechCrunch.
Code-named Project Titan, the new e-mail service is expected to be announced Monday at a special Facebook press event during the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco.
Rumors of a Facebook e-mail service first surfaced in February. At the time, it was suggested that your Facebook vanity URL might be automatically assigned to you as your @facebook.com e-mail address.
Facebook invitation hints
Adding credence to TechCrunch's report are two features in Facebook's press invitation suggesting Monday's event is all about messaging. The invite features Facebook's Inbox/Messages icon used in its mobile phone applications. The invite also features a red and blue border similar to an airmail envelope.
Of course, an e-mail inbox isn't the only possibility for a messaging-themed Facebook event (assuming the decorations on the invitation are actually hints). On Wednesday, GigaOm theorized that multiuser group chat will soon be integrated into Facebook's smartphone applications. The technology blog didn't mention Monday's event as a possible launch date, only guessing multiuser chat will launch "within months."
Facebook e-mail equal privacy headache?
If Facebook Webmail is coming Monday, it will likely be welcomed by a large number of Facebook users. But a Facebook e-mail service is almost certain to cause concern among privacy advocates. Using Facebook for Webmail would put even more of your data in the hands of the social network. And the company would almost certainly mine your messages for keywords to better target advertising at you, similar to what Google's Gmail does now.
There may also be concern that Facebook would control, and possibly block, e-mail messages flowing through its servers. In early 2009, torrent site The Pirate Bay introduced a new feature that let Facebook users send each other links to torrent files through Facebook's Inbox messaging service. It didn't take long before Facebook started blocking private messages containing torrent links, according to Wired. At the time, Facebook argued it had the right to block this content since the company forbids its members to use the service for unlawful purposes such as disseminating copyrighted material.
Facebook can also be overly aggressive with its anti-spam filtering, which could hamper use of a Facebook e-mail service if you start sending too many e-mail messages at once.
Web 2.0 Summit
- SuccessFactors acquiring Jobs2web days after SAP deal
- Despite bold moves on mobile payments, long haul ahead
- Twitter to continue duplicating external apps
- Zuckerberg talks Facebook Messages, mistakes, social revolution
- Yahoo looks to regain past glory with location services
- Bartz: Yahoo developing content optimization service
- Hackers, spammers will target Facebook Messages, say experts
- QuickPoll: Should Google, Yahoo and Hotmail be worried about Facebook?
- Privacy questions trail Facebook Messages
- Update: Yahoo makes local search, social moves


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