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Facebook For Dummies. Carolyn AbramЧитать онлайн книгу.

Facebook For Dummies - Carolyn  Abram


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after natural disasters or security attacks. This feature allows people to easily notify their wider Facebook community that they are okay and can even help them coordinate with the services they might need. Facebook’s Groups feature was used to help coordinate civilian boat evacuations after a hurricane flooded Houston, Texas, in 2017. Because people live so much of their lives on Facebook, Facebook winds up being there for both the good and the bad.

      Adding Your Face

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Signing up and getting started

      

Getting confirmed and managing emails

      

Finding friends

      

Adding information about yourself

      Chapter 1 covers why you might want to join Facebook. In this chapter, you find out how to sign up for Facebook and begin using the site. Keep a few things in mind when you sign up. First, Facebook is exponentially more useful and more fun when you start adding friends. Without friends, it can feel kind of dull. Second, your friends may take a few days to respond to your friend requests, so be patient. Even if your first time on Facebook isn’t as exciting as you'd hoped, try again over the following weeks. Third, you can have only one personal account on Facebook. Facebook links accounts to email addresses or mobile numbers, and your email address (or number) can be linked to only one account. This system enforces a world where people are who they say they are on Facebook.

       First and Last Name: Facebook is a place based on real identity. Sign up with the name people know you by. We don’t recommend signing up with a fake name or alias because that will make it hard for your friends to find you on the site. After you’ve signed up, you can add nicknames or maiden names to your timeline to make it even easier for friends to find you. But for now, just use your real first and last name.

       Mobile Number or Email: You need to enter your valid email address or mobile phone number here. If you enter your email, you'll need to do so twice to make sure there are no typos.

       New Password: As with all passwords, using a combination of letters, numbers, and punctuation marks is a good idea for your Facebook password. It’s probably not a good idea to use the same password for every site you join, so we recommend using something unique for Facebook. Facebook requires passwords to be at least six characters.

       Birthday: Enter your date of birth. If you’re shy about sharing your birthday, don’t worry: You’ll be able to hide this information on your timeline later.

       Gender (Female, Male, or Custom): Facebook uses your gender information to construct sentences about you on the site. For example, you might see a News Feed story that reads “Amy updated her profile picture.” Your gender options are Female, Male, or Custom. You must choose one. If you choose Custom, you'll see a drop-down menu to select your preferred pronoun. Your options are she/her, he/him, or they/them. Your pronoun will be visible to everyone on Facebook, and Facebook will use it to construct sentences about you. In the text field below the pronoun menu, you can enter your gender separately if it differs from your pronoun or you want to add more context to your gender identity. You can also leave this gender text field blank.

      After you fill out this information, click Sign Up (the big green button). Congratulations: You've officially joined Facebook!

Snapshot of entering information here to create a Facebook account.

      FIGURE 2-1: Enter information here to create a Facebook account.

When you click Sign Up, you’re agreeing to Facebook’s terms of service, data policy, and cookies policy. Most websites have similar terms and policies, but if you’re curious about just what Facebook’s are, you can click the blue Terms, Data Policy, and Cookies Policy links just above the big green Sign Up button.

      After you sign up for Facebook, you'll immediately receive an email in your inbox asking you to confirm your account. This may be the first of many emails Facebook sends you as it helps you get fully integrated into the Facebook world. Read on to learn how to respond to these emails and why they are important.

      Confirmation

      Confirmation is Facebook’s way of trying to make sure you are really you and that the email address you used to sign up is really yours. When you click the Sign Up button, Facebook sends you an email asking you to confirm your account. In other words, Facebook is double-checking that you are the person who owns your email address.

      

If Facebook is asking you to confirm your email but you aren’t seeing that email in your inbox, try checking your spam or trash folder. Sometimes Facebook emails can wind up there by accident.

      Go to your email, look for the Facebook message, and open it. (It will usually have a subject such as Welcome to Facebook or Facebook Confirmation.) That email contains a link or button. Your confirmation email may also contain a confirmation code that you will be asked to enter on Facebook’s website. Click the link or button, enter the confirmation code if prompted, and you will be confirmed.

      Email outreach

      After you’ve confirmed your email address Facebook considers you a full-fledged member of the site. However, it doesn’t want you to show up once and leave, so it may email you to remind you that you're now a Facebook user. These outreach emails have various subject lines, ranging from a notice that one of your new Facebook friends has updated his or her status, to a general notice that “You have more friends on Facebook than you think.” Clicking the links in these emails will open Facebook in your browser.

Snapshot of keeping the inbox free of clutter.

      FIGURE 2-2: Keep your inbox free of clutter.

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