44. Legal issues.  Navigating Facebook's Terms and Conditions. Prohibitions: (taken from 3 different documents) "The promotion’s objective is to promote any of the following product categories: gambling, tobacco, firearms, prescription drugs, or gasoline" "The prize or any part of the prize includes alcohol, tobacco, dairy, firearms, or prescription drugs;"  "You must not confuse, mislead, surprise, or defraud anyone." "Liquor, beer, wine or other alcoholic beverages (unless the appropriate Demographic Restrictions are used), or sale of tobacco products, ammunition and/or firearms;"
66. Conclusions. It's fun building social stuff. Plan your application well. Define the social objects, do they have value? Build an html prototype. The FB platform can be a very challenging development environment. Choose the right development platform. Look at lots of other applications. Use FBML/XFBML where you can. Don't be evil. Be realistic about engagement targets. @FederationMedia
67. Reading/References/Resources. FB Developer Applicationhttp://developers.facebook.com/Anaotomy of a FB Applicationhttp://wiki.developers.facebook.com/index.php/Anatomy_of_a_Facebook_AppA much better Anatomyhttp://www.ccheever.com/blog/?tag=facebook-connectFB Developer Policys and Termshttp://developers.facebook.com/policy/FB client libraryshttp://wiki.developers.facebook.com/index.php/User:Client_LibrariesFB Toolkit (AKA Mircrosoft FB SDK, .NET)http://facebooktoolkit.codeplex.com/http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/ee388574.aspxSocial Pluginshttp://developers.facebook.com/plugins?footer=1Statisticshttp://statistics.allfacebook.com/applicationsSecurityhttp://www.owasp.org/index.php/Facebook#Application_canvasRed Bull Roshambullhttp://apps.facebook.com/redbullroshambull/ Social Graph/Social Object Theoryhttp://www.devcomments.com/Facebook-s-Open-Graph-Protocol-from-a-Web-Developer-s-Perspective-i26105.htm http://www.labont.it/ferraris/SOMO/0503_Social_Objects.pdf Â
Hinweis der Redaktion
Examples of collective intentionality are joint intention and commitment, mutual belief, we-attitudes, collective acceptance and agreement, collective responsibility, etc.http://www.helsinki.fi/~pylikosk/collint/group.htmlCollective Intentionality and Sociality. Collective joint mental states and activities of a group of people exhibit collective intentionality or “aboutness”. The contents of those mental states and activities are shared by these people. Typical examples of collective intentionality are presented by joint intentions and mutual beliefs. Sociality concerns social relations. People may share collective intentional states or they may take others’ thoughts and actions into account when acting. This indicates two basic kinds of sociality. The term "collective intentionality" in the present context is understood to refer not only to phenomena of collective intentionality (e.g. joint intention and commitment, mutual belief, we-attitudes, collective acceptance and agreement, collective responsibility, and the like) but is also taken to cover collective action, social practices as well as social institutions and organizations.