Facebook to license its platform for other social sites
Facebook will help other social networking sites to run applications developed
for its own software platform, it said Thursday.
The company already encourages developers to build applications that work with
its site, publishing details of the tags and APIs (application programming interfaces)
needed to exchange data.
Now it plans to license those details for use by other social networking sites
and platforms, according to the Facebook
Developers blog. The idea is that developers will only have to write their
widget or small application once if there is a common platform for structuring
how the applications integrate with sites.
The initiative runs in parallel with Google's OpenSocial project, which revolves
around creating standard APIs (application programming interfaces) for social
networking applications. APIs let applications exchange information and are
crucial to building programs that, for example, take information from Facebook
profiles and blend it with some new functionality or feature.
Facebook already has a taker. On Wednesday, social networking site Bebo said
it would use Facebook's standards for its own Open Application Platform. Bebo
isn't taking sides, however: it will eventually support Google's OpenSocial
too, it said.
MySpace, the largest social networking site, has also said it will support
OpenSocial.
Facebook said its architectural platform is composed in part of HTML (Hypertext
Markup Language) related tags and methods for building applications.
It published details of FBML,
its set of tags for formatting data exchanged between applications and users.
Some of the tags enable developers to build programs with the same design elements
as Facebook's site, so the application blends in.
External developers have created about 7,000 applications since Facebook opened
up its site in June. The applications have offered a commercial opportunity
for developers, although Facebook has been under fire for how those programs
respect users' privacy.
Google's OpenSocial platform got off the ground last month with Plaxo's Pulse,
the first application to use the APIs. Pulse, which aggregates and delivers
new information from social networking and other Web sites, is a feature of
Plaxo's Web-based address book service.
IDG News Service
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