12. A week after he launched the site in 2004, Mark was accused of having stolen the idea from the three Harvard seniors.
13. Sued Mark and Facebook for theft and fraud, starting a legal clash that continues to this day.
14. In 2005 a network for high schools and businesses was created.
15. With an email address everyone over age 13 able to create an account on September of 2006.
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20. The 141 Character “Quik Update”- These updates will not show up in the main news feed like your regular update. Rather, they will actually appear in the sidebar, with ads scattered amongst them. Facebook is hoping that by utilizing even the ad space for updates and features that users will get as much enjoyment out of the site as possible. These “Quik Updates” are for shorter, more concise, or even shorthand messages. Regular updates will still be in use for longer messages or those that are more important/focused. No one is really sure why they chose the 141 character size limit on these updates.
21. “Super Public” Profiles- The way “super public” works is that in place of ads, your picture and parts of your profile will be advertised around the web. Also, in Google search results, rather than just a link to your profile, it will show your main page in the results.