Facebook Bans AdSense In Apps 130
An anonymous reader writes "Three days ago Facebook finalized their list of accepted ad networks for use within Facebook Apps; AdSense being an (unsurprising?) omission from the list, stating that any missing ad network had yet to agree to the Facebook TOS. Facebook developers were quick to point out the only losers in this cold-war between Facebook and Google are the developers themselves. Other devs go on to clarify that the reputations of some of the accepted networks is shady at best, leaving developers with sub-par options to monetize their work on the Facebook platform."
Google will outlast Facebook. (Score:3, Interesting)
So who really cares about this "debate"? Nobody who matters.
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The OP is almost certainly correct in that Google will outlive FB, so really this is a mad panic about nothing at all.
A couple years from now, almost no-one will even remember "that Facebook thingy from the Stone Age", but Google will still be the search engine of choice.
And by then the developer-emos now weeping about Google vs. FB will be praying that everyone else doesn't remember how seriously they took any of this.
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I'm not so sure about that.
Facebook, for all the faults that it does have, does an awfully lot of things right.
It will require something dramatically different to get people off of FB. Google offers search - and if FB allows people to be connected to the stuff they are really looking for, then search isn't needed as much.
Hell... what if FB partnered with BING (MS), and pushed that platform.
How many millions of users searching BING from within FB would put a dent in Google's search traffic.
FB can capitalize
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FB can capitalize big in so many ways.
But it isn't about that. It doesn't really matter whether they can make money or not. What matters is that anybody can do to Facebook what Facebook did to Myspace.
What happens is that there are several networks around. Almost everyone uses at least one (generally the most popular one) and many people use two or three or five. At some point something happens to cause people to want to use one of the less popular networks instead of the most popular one -- some scandal with the most popular network, or some i
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Hell... what if FB partnered with BING (MS), and pushed that platform.
How many millions of users searching BING from within FB would put a dent in Google's search traffic.
Facebook's web search results (yes, you can search the web, clumsily, through Facebook) are indeed powered by Bing.
And to my knowledge, it hasn't made a damn bit of difference for anyone. If Bing search hasn't lured me away from Google, Facebook's odd mix of users, pages, help topics, and web results most certainly will not.
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That's interesting. ;)
I didn't realize that you could search using Bing through FB.
Thanks for the info.
SO... my speculation was all for naught.
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-1 - Nazi Asshole
umm, no (Score:4, Interesting)
I doubt that facebook will die, normally companies that get this big hang around indefinitely, even if they eventually turn into yahoo or aol.
There is a killer app waiting to kill facebook, namely an open source private social networking application that takes photo & video sharing to the logical extreme of friend2friend file sharing. Ideally, you'd want all communications traffic-analysis-resistant and obviously encrypted. An approach might be making FreeNet user friendly and adding a FreeNet Social Networking app, but FreeNet seems slow as piss and incapable of handling even basic IM functionality.
I doubt you'll knock out facebook without some major new feature though, like general purpose friend2friend file sharing. And you'll need solid plausible deniability before that one becomes viable.
Alternatively, all the pitiful "also ran" social networks like Tuenti, Hi5, Orkut, etc. could gang up on facebook by adopting some common shared data model. I'd expect they'll try this eventually, but like 5+ years after facebook has killed them all, and only once google starts buying them.
Another alternative might be for various countries to start legislating around social networks, requiring age verification, requiring that photos expire after 6 months, barring the data from being mirrored outside the country, barring civil servants from using foreign based social networks, etc.
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So what if they hang around like some bad smell from Ye Olden Days of the Internet? How relevant is Yahoo! or AOL these days? Companies like those are on the brink of becoming SCOs.
No doubt some people still actually use Myspace and Bebo for their intended purposes, but most former users - that is to say, 99% of users registered with those services - will have already forgotten their login names and passwords. It's not as if those companies matter any more.
And I believe that was the point.
Google will still
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> Alternatively, all the pitiful "also ran" social networks like Tuenti, Hi5, Orkut, etc. could gang up on facebook by adopting some common shared data model.
And open social network, that would be nice. Use well defined protocols and interfaces, and you could see the same aggregated streams in facebook, in buzz or in orkut. Facebook is never going to join that, though :-).
depends (Score:2)
Except that's potentially among the worst approaches for users. Does this open protocol just hand over all your data to any partner that asks? Ideally no, but exactly what data becomes invisible matters. I'd hope that at least the friend graph should become only locally visible, although still individual social networking sites are big enough for that graph to be concerning.
I'm afraid the best solution would be a peer2peer system designed to prevent even traffic analysis :
- Users are identified by a SHA-
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How does the social graph api show friend that I have on another network? I don't think it does...
And does it allow me to see my facebook friends on another network? Maybe, but I am sure there are strings attached.
Interoperability has to be the goal. Just like email works between different provides (you may not remember the time when some email systems were a walled garden, eventually linked by clumsy gateways...), so should social networks.
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I doubt that facebook will die
Just wait until apple gets serious about social networking.
Hell, even google might get into trouble if apple would go into the search direction.
lol no (Score:2)
Apple takes existing technology and polish the implementation until it fits the average user perfectly. You'll never see them deliver well on any technology that hasn't been well rehearsed elsewhere first.
In fact, their only even inkling towards new technology has been backing the LLVM project, but that's partially meant to make up for shortcomings in their BSD kernel, i.e. protecting them from needing to switch kernels to Linux or something.
Apple could obviously deliver a solid social networking applicati
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Well, is seems it is just a matter of time until Apple just blocks facebook and google altogether, and provides their own version.
Another strategy is to incrementally cripple the experience of facebook and google on their own hardware, luring users to their own services.
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Isn't "there's an app for that" precisely Apple's narrow minded vision of interoperability with the likes of facebook and google?
*If* there was a standard for friending and access between different social networking providers, Apple might roll their own into MobileMe effectively endorsing that standard over Facebook. I doubt you'd see them cripple facebook on their products even then. And they'd never try going it alone without an established user base and a standard to follow.
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Apple takes existing technology and polish the implementation until it fits the average user perfectly. You'll never see them deliver well on any technology that hasn't been well rehearsed elsewhere first.
Yeah, like Firewire, USB, touch screen cell phones, app stores, Thunderbolt, unibody laptops, single-unit computers, etc.
For a community that's been up in arms agains anti-OSS FUD over the past decade, slashdot sure has no problem using the same tactics against non-OSS products/companies.
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Not everything Apple does is a hit, the same as Google - usually for different reasons, but usually with same outcome: a killed product/product line quietly brushed under the rug.
Facebook's demands (Score:5, Informative)
The TOS "advertising providers" have to comply with are very very strict. I doubt Google will agree to things like these:
And Facebook would be able to "audit" Google for anything covered in the agreement:
And if anything goes wrong, Facebook already had decided the verdict of the trial:
Re:Facebook's demands (Score:5, Insightful)
The TOS "advertising providers" have to comply with are very very strict. I doubt Google will agree to things like these:
That's rather draconian, I'm not sure why any ad company would agree to those terms. It's a bit unreasonable for Facebook to demand the names and contact info of everyone involved in "designing, targeting, serving advertising related products/services". Does this mean that the companies who have agreed will have to fork over the contact info for every ad buyer that provides pre-designed ads? (In other words, nearly all ad buyers.) Sure sounds like it.
Frankly this sounds like an attempt by Facebook to get the names of employees to headhunt for an eventual Facebook-owned Ad network, as well as making sure they have plenty of contacts at the companies who buy ads as well. This is seriously abusive, even by Facebook's normal behavior. I suspect any ad companies who have agreed to this already are going to seriously regret it in the future.
Now as to me personally, I don't give a damn what they do here, I'm going to continue to adblock on Facebook because all the ads Facebook themselves run are obnoxious and annoying.
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That's rather draconian, I'm not sure why any ad company would agree to those terms. It's a bit unreasonable for Facebook to demand the names and contact info of everyone involved in "designing, targeting, serving advertising related products/services". Does this mean that the companies who have agreed will have to fork over the contact info for every ad buyer that provides pre-designed ads? (In other words, nearly all ad buyers.) Sure sounds like it.
I can think of one reason to agree with the terms: the ad company in question may be about to die due to Google competition and they know if they agree they not only get a chance to survive but also give Facebook the incentive they need to proceed with this and block any large and healthy ad company from the service.
Frankly this sounds like an attempt by Facebook to get the names of employees to headhunt for an eventual Facebook-owned Ad network, as well as making sure they have plenty of contacts at the companies who buy ads as well. This is seriously abusive, even by Facebook's normal behavior.
That is very likely, but I don't think this is beyond Facebook's standards. It does not surprises me at all. Another possibility is they are not doing it to seed competition, but instead as a sl
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I can think of one reason to agree with the terms: the ad company in question may be about to die due to Google competition and they know if they agree they not only get a chance to survive but also give Facebook the incentive they need to proceed with this and block any large and healthy ad company from the service.
To me, though, that translates:
"My boyfriend isn't paying any attention to me lately. Maybe I can get Zuck to rape me."
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It makes sense (Score:2)
Shady ad companies for products on a shady portal.
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I ask this entirely out of ignorance.
I'm in canada, so lots of websites that do location detection show me pretty crappy, off topic or downright strange adds (usually in lieu of music or TV adds that would be only available in the canada on different networks than the US0. These I think are actually shady, but I don't click on them to know. Facebook seems to have a lot of 'stop smoking' 'get laid', random nonsense job postings that sort thing. Even if it isn't, it seems pretty sketchy. Is it the same if
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> Shady ad companies for products on a shady portal.
You forgot "shady" in there :-).
Facebook is pretty much an abusive platform (Score:5, Informative)
A couple of months back I spent a few weeks looking at developing a Facebook App. By the time I was done coding a simple one, I'd basically come to the conclusion that there were a lot better things to do with my time. Here's why:
* The APIs and SDKs. There's a lot of them. And not in the lots-to-love sense. In the dissociative identity disorder sense. Some of them work as specified. Some of them don't.
* The documentation. It sucks. It sucks extra because of the changes to the APIs -- a lot of times, you don't know if any given howto, forum post, internet article, and (in some cases) actual official documentation refers to the version of the API or SDK you're using. It sucks *particularly* hard because some complete moron at Facebook made the decision to blow away a community-built wiki site and replace it with a Bing search of the half-hearted official docs. And a lot of the links still out there still point to it.
* The policy/UI changes. Profile boxes (rather successful interaction hooks) were phased out in favor of tabs, which were going to be The New And Better Way. Now tabs are going away -- why? Oh, because it turned out that people didn't actually use them and Facebook now has another idea of what to do.
And this is from a company that's certainly sitting on the actual resources to do a hell of a lot better than this.
Watching all this, I developed two theories about Facebook:
1) It's possible that its success is more or less an accident of history -- they put something good enough together at the right time to become the premiere social network, and because of the network effect, it's sticky enough people don't simply defect despite its problems. But as an organization, they're not genuinely smart enough to do much further effectively... including providing a good platform for third-party devs.
2) Facebook doesn't really actually care about providing an effective and reliable platform for developers. They don't have to. There's enough incentive for would-be devs to try something and see if it works out that they can let the mass of attempts hit the wall and fail, and still reap benefits from those who break through and make things work. In the meanwhile, they can pretty much shift agendas as they see fit, and if that breaks a number of developer eggs, oh well. More will come.
I'm not sure which one is more true. My money is on #2, really, but there's possibly some measure of #1 as well. Either way, though, the upshot is that it's more or less an abusive platform, and the announcement that they're forbidding AdSense doesn't surprise me in the least -- it's totally consistent with both theories.
If you've got an idea that needs to feed from the fabric of the social web in order to succeed, then it's still the place to go. But if you've got another idea that doesn't, it might be better to go with that than to work with these guys.
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1) It's possible that its success is more or less an accident of history -- they put something good enough together at the right time to become the premiere social network, and because of the network effect, it's sticky enough people don't simply defect despite its problems.
You think that's an "accident"?? Almost certainly, that was the business plan! People were starting to turn on to the idea of social networks, and by targeting exclusively universities first, they would hit an early-adopter demographic just at the time they were forming many new social connections (freshers) that they wouldn't want to lose by moving to a different network later, and the network effect would make it grow. That ain't no accident!
Either way, though, the upshot is that it's more or less an abusive platform
Newsflash -- they're all abusive platforms. That's what tech
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Yep, its all in the textbook.
The good thing about this is that companies with this mindset from the beginning need a rock solid market opportunity to get too big to ignore. Yes, Facebook is in a good position now, but its really only at the whim of favoritism. Missteps expose their complete sociopathy, and I don't think Facebook is so central to the industry that anyone cares if they fall.
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That's laughable.
Facebook is social gaming right now. There is at least one multi-billion dollar company created just from Facebook games (Zynga) who reaches something like 50 million social gamers per day. There are other multi-billion dollar companies who've recently entered the social gaming industry (Electronic Arts [EA], and Disney come to mind) and are trying to get a share of this enormous market.
As much as w
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they would hit an early-adopter demographic just at the time they were forming many new social connections (freshers) that they wouldn't want to lose by moving to a different network later, and the network effect would make it grow. That ain't no accident!
Theory #1 is compatible with the idea that while what you're saying is true, neither Zuck nor anybody else involved had an explicit understanding of this while they were building it.
Newsflash -- they're all abusive platforms. That's what tech giants do....
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> 2) Facebook doesn't really actually care about providing an effective and reliable platform for developers.
That would explain my observation - which is that all facebook apps suck. Some may be marginally useful, but require way too much data access. Others are just plain silly or annoying.
I think once we have a half decent local app platform, maybe with a social or cloud interface, facebook apps are going to be history.
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Pretty sure GP is talking about an app for embedding in FB, like Farmville or wtv.
Facebook Apps and privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't use any Facebook apps at all. Ever.
Why?
Because every "click to confirm" dialog contains requests for information tantamount to anally raping my account with no lube and no reach-around.
Maybe, just maybe, if I had more control over the granularity of such requests, I *might* just consider using a Facebook game or something. But the way things are right now, nope, not gonna happen.
And if you're a Facebook app developer that is intent on anally raping Facebook user accounts, die in a fire.
--
BMO
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Re:Facebook Apps and privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
When it comes to Facebook's arrangement of privacy-related options, settings, and design, they are either actively malicious or so incompetent that their handling is indistinguishable from malice.
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It'd be wonderful if there were some sort of option whereby an app could allow you to see a list of your friends, invite them, etc, without the actual app being able to see that information, but Facebook doesn't really provide that level of detail.
An app can display a Request Dialog [facebook.com] that prompts the user to invite selected friends to use the app. But because the app gets a callback about who was invited, it's possible that apps can't do this without being given access to the user's public or private friend list. As you say, this should be possible even if an app hasn't requested access to anything. The docs don't make it clear what permissions are required.
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I'm writing an app where the user can upload images to his/her facebook account. For this, I need the additional "post to wall"-permission. That's fine and understandable, but even the basic permissions every app has to get are already in the "rape their privacy" range. I don't need even need to know the user's name or anything from the friends list. However, there's nothing I can do about that, the permission is still given.
The exact wording is:
Access my basic information
Includes name, profile picture,
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Impossible! All my app ( Calcudoku [facebook.com]) needs is:
(1) user id, and (2) first name,
but I'm forced to ask the user for "basic information", which is: name, picture, gender, networks, user id, list of friends, likes, music, about me, location, education history, and work history (what the ??!!)
I'm also getting fed up with the changing APIs, lack of documentation, intermittent errors, and yes, I am using AdSense on th
Good, now facebook should ban all ads (Score:1, Insightful)
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If you're getting something for free in exchange for viewing ads, how is that a bad thing? Unintrusive ads are no problem, IMO...
However, I end up blocking most ads too, because they are all far too detrimental to the experience:
-Flash banners slow down my older PC hardware to a crawl, whereas the experience is more than fast enough when the banners are blocked
-TV ads are, well, also entirely intrusive... to the point that I don't watch TV unless it's torrented
If my browser only displayed ads that were stat
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enough with facebook (Score:1)
Its boring, irrelevant and any of you twits actually fueling facebook with your private content are just tools. Lets see, at 3 cents an email address, how many have you all just given to facebook? Facebook is roughly equivalent to masturbation in public.
Facebook is fun.. Google is practical. (Score:1)
Hopefully practical is more important and better marketing to sales people.
Google's move (Score:2)
They have it backwards (Score:1)
I'd rather see Facebook's embedded code banned from websites - the one that lets you comment on any site because you're already signed in with your FB account, even though you never did and never would - but it's too late, because you've already requested all the user icons, so FB knows where you're browsing. ...then after the page loads in Opera, it contacts Facebook once every 0.25 seconds until you disable Javascript... I loathe it.
facebook application (Score:1)
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^^ One of the many reasons why I like the user-friendliness of the /etc/hosts file.
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Oh shit. Don't ever mention that file...
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I am just a troll trolling another troll.
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Re:Slashdot bias (Score:5, Insightful)
If they tick off advertisers, then who are they going to sell your information to?
I imagine advertisers would overlook a ton of BS in order to gain access to (what they'd perceive as) such a treasure trove of personal information. The prize is too tempting to walk away from that easily.
Developers are a different story. If Facebook insists on alienating them, effectively using them as pawns in their pissing contest with Google, they might eventually get tired of that. Most people don't like being jerked around, especially for no good reason. If they finally go elsewhere, Facebook will miss them when they're gone.
Re:Slashdot bias (Score:5, Insightful)
If they finally go elsewhere, Facebook will miss them when they're gone.
Very true. I believe 100% that the biggest reason that Facebook has grown to the size that it is today is because of the (mostly shitty) applications.
People no longer play Farmville because it's on Facebook-- they go to Facebook TO play Farmville.
It makes me sad to say that.
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Ulitmately, we don't.
I'm going to make you sadder. (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.amazon.com/FarmVille-Dummies-Angela-Morales/dp/1118016963 [amazon.com]
That's right, Farmville For Dummies.
You may now cry yourself to sleep.
--
BMO
Farmville? (Score:2)
I thought _facebook_ was for dummies.
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For instance I was getting worried that zombies would take over my farm. I was relieved that this book explained to me that that was a different game altogether and that they are completely separate, and the zombies from the game I had not signed up for wouldn't rise.
Well, you got to admit, they KNOW their audience (Score:2)
Anyway, if I suggest Farmville is just SimCity 2010... am I going to be able to make it out of here before the hord descends?
For full disclosure, got neither a facebook account of played or even seen Farmville runnings. IRC and Trade Wars is where it is at. Now get of my lawn.
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As intelligence goes up, happiness often goes down. See, I made a graph. I make a lot of graphs...
God damn, as a tendency this one is the straight truth.
Intelligence makes happiness more difficult to achieve. It also makes it more meaningful and more deeply appreciated once attained. It is solid and meaningful then, not fleeting and transient like the happiness (i.e. indulgence) of too many.
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And on about any other website. It makes me wonder why some people don't have everything related to FaceBook adblocked yet.
Of course, AdSense is already blocked by everyone I know, so both culprits of this article would be happily together.
Re:Slashdot bias (Score:5, Insightful)
I love how Facebook can't do anything right as far as Slashdot is concerned. If they block ad networks, their evil...if they don't their also evil. Come on people!
Yes there is a definite pro-Facebook bias around here. Otherwise there'd never be so many Facebook stories.
Bear in mind that the very worst thing you can do to a company like Facebook is to ignore them.
To see their name in news headlines on so many sites tells them that they are important, that people are waiting with bated breath to see what they will do next, that people think it's worth talking about. It's what helps keep their brand in mind and ultimately helps to drive traffic to their site.
If Google is willing to partner with Facebook for advertising and Facebook thinks having a pissing contest is more important, then to any would-be Facebook developers: doesn't that tell you what their priorities are? Their priorities certainly don't include you. If you have skill and talent and a good work ethic, why not go someplace where your efforts are better appreciated?
Re:Slashdot bias (Score:5, Funny)
As a facebook user, I get mad pussy.
As a facebook developer, I get mad money.
Do the math.
0 + 0 = 0
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That doesn't even take into account:
mad = insane
I would say:
-1 + -1 = sounds good amongst people you don't really know, sound bad amongst those who are worth knowing
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Your math is incorrect, but I will give partial credit because mad money and mad pussy do cancel each other out to equal zero.
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If Google is willing to partner with Facebook for advertising and Facebook thinks having a pissing contest is more important, then to any would-be Facebook developers: doesn't that tell you what their priorities are? Their priorities certainly don't include you. If you have skill and talent and a good work ethic, why not go someplace where your efforts are better appreciated?
Because like most businesses or entrepreneurs, you'd rather go where the customers are.
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I love how you mischaracterize the story just so you can go on a rant against "slashdot." They didn't block ads. There are ads all over the fucking place.
And it's "they're," you knucklehead.
Yeah, he's a knucklehead who can't correctly do easy things.
People can bitch and moan about "grammar nazis" all they like. What hard experience will tell you, assuming you fucking listen, is that people who can correctly write a sentence in their own native language are one hell of a lot more likely to have an argument worth entertaining than those who fail basic things that 4th graders are expected to know.
If you have a weakness in this area and basic grammar is difficult for you, the remedy is easy to un
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It's a chatterbot dude. He has prescripted responses for certain keywords. Also adds something for anonymous posts.
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