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Facebook Basics Patricia Edie 20 June 2019.

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Presentation on theme: "Facebook Basics Patricia Edie 20 June 2019."— Presentation transcript:

1 Facebook Basics Patricia Edie 20 June 2019

2 How many have a Facebook account?
How many are considering starting a Facebook page? How many had an account at one time and have stopped using it? How many have concerns about privacy issues and others accessing your information? How many would like to know how to use it more wisely?

3 What is Facebook, really
A social networking site that makes it easy for you to connect and share with family and friends online. • Facebook is free to join and free to use. • It can be used wherever they are in the world as long as they have internet access. • Facebook users can share messages, videos links, photographs and websites. • Facebook users can join groups or follow people/hobbies that interest them • You can search by name or to find people. • Users can choose to allow access or deny it. • Privacy settings can be set to only connect with people you have agreed to allow access. • Facebook is available 24 hours a day so people can communicate without time zones causing a problem. Originally designed for college students, Facebook was created in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg while he was enrolled at Harvard University. By 2006, anyone over the age of 13 with a valid address could join Facebook. Today, Facebook is the world's largest social network, with two billion monthly users with FIVE new profiles being created every second! it currently boasts its oldest user at 107 years old. Many parents and grandparents use the site to keep in contact with grandchildren and family around the world.

4 Reasons NOT to use Facebook?
Is Facebook “safe” to use? With all the reports of companies getting hacked, information being stolen, as well as the whole personal identity theft issue, you may be left wondering whether Facebook is safe to use. As a website is a pretty safe place. There is built-in security that helps to protect you and your information. How Does Facebook Make Money? Advertising is the company's revenue channel. With self-serve ads becoming a booming business for Facebook and with the growth of Engagement Ads, the coin always has the two sides so you must know both sides of the Facebook & try to be aware of the Facebook drawbacks & go with the Facebook benefits. the use of Facebook entirely depends on you & your usage. If it is used in a right way, right proportion & with proper care, then FB would be proved an amazing site for you.  For marketing & networking purpose Facebook is actually a great tool. But as we have said the coin has two sides, every user of Facebook must use site thoughtfully to minimize risk with the help of proper privacy settings & being aware of the drawbacks of social media sites. Never share posts that spreading wrong information, false news or hate speech, which can hurt some people’s feelings. Report if you found something wrong.  Using Facebook in the proper manner & not being addicted to it is important; if it so then Facebook is not harmful to you,  Know yourself and your tendencies If you cannot control your mouse finger when you see “click bait” then Facebook is not for you!

5 Facebook Terms Friend: You can add people you know as friends on Facebook. Your friends will see the things you share, including status update Status Update: One of the most common things people share on Facebook are status updates, which are short, text-based posts your friends can see and comment on Notification: You'll receive a notification in an message and on your homepage whenever someone interacts with you on Facebook. Comment: Whenever your friends share on Facebook, you can leave a comment about their posts Like: Whenever your friends share something on Facebook, you can choose to like the post. This is just a simple way of showing your friends that you enjoyed what they shared Newsfeed: The News Feed is a stream of updates from your friends and any Facebook Pages you follow. This is where you'll probably spend most of your time on Facebook because it's where you can view and comment on what's happening with your friends. Timeline: also known as your profile page, the Timeline is where you'll share information about yourself on Facebook. For example, it's where you'll post your profile picture and share basic information about yourself. Tag: Friends can tag you in photos and posts they share on Facebook. Posts you're tagged in will appear on your Timeline.

6 Creating a Facebook Account
Under the words Sign Up, enter your personal information and desired password, then click Sign Up. Creating a Facebook Account Navigate to   in your web browser Before you can access all of Facebook's features, you'll need to confirm your address. To do this, sign in to your account, open the confirmation message from Facebook, and click Confirm Your Account. Before you can use Facebook, you must create an account. Creating a Facebook account is free. All you need to get started is an  address 

7 A word about email accounts
Consider having more than one account. Personal Mail (friends & family) Shopping account Throw-away account My Facebook uses my “throw away account”. My passwords are different for each account.

8 Exploring Facebook Homepage
NEWSFEED Time Line – also called Profile – click on your name Activity: Friend requests, messages, notifications Create a post field: Menu Newsfeed

9 Timeline Page (Profile)

10 Your Basic Privacy Timeline to be visible only to Friends.
Whenever you share something on Facebook, you can choose who you'll share with. In the infographic below, you can see the most common sharing options, including Only me, Lists, Friends, and Public. Timeline to be visible only to Friends.

11 How your friends see your page

12 How the public sees your page

13 Common Sense Facebook is designed to be more open and social than traditional communication tools. You post a photo on a friend's Timeline. That photo will be visible to all of your friends on Facebook, not just the person you shared it with. The photo will also be visible to anyone who is friends with your friend. This is one reason people enjoy using Facebook—it's easy to share with lots of people at the same time. As long as you're somewhat careful about the things you share, Facebook doesn't pose a serious risk to your privacy. Before you share anything on Facebook, like a comment or status update, you'll need to consider how comfortable you are with many people seeing this information. If you wouldn't feel comfortable sharing something in a public place, you may not want to share it on Facebook either.

14 Setting your Privacy However you use Facebook, it's important to choose the privacy settings that will work best for you. Facebook offers two main ways to control your privacy: You can apply privacy settings that set general rules about who can contact you and view your information. You can control who sees every individual thing you share.

15 From here, you can modify who sees your posts, block certain individuals, and perform a privacy checkup.

16 Basic Privacy Settings

17 Ad Settings

18 Personal Data Consider your Facebook like a glorified phonebook. No need to share any details you wouldn’t be comfortable sharing with strangers face-to-face.

19 Adding Friends Using the Search Field

20 You do NOT HAVE to be friends!
Denying, Unfollowing, Unfriending, Blocking, Snoozing …the person is never notified of your action!

21 Those posts you don’t want to miss! “See First”

22 Responding to a Post You can: Do NOTHING Like it Comment on it
Share it

23 Saving a Post – RIGHT click

24 Creating a Post

25 Capturing a Photo

26 Who can see the post? My default setting is “Friends” but I can change that for an individual post.

27 You can always change your mind!


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