Back @ you, Twitter: Facebook adopts 'at links' tagging

Social networkers can now link their replies to other users' profiles

By Caroline McCarthy, 11 September 2009 09:03

NEWS

Facebook on Thursday announced that members can now link to other members' profiles in their status messages by using the @ symbol. The move is clearly inspired by the popularity of Twitter's "@-replies".

This new feature basically means you can link to the profiles of your friends and other pages on Facebook, and that your friends will be informed when they've been tagged. It's currently rolling out to members' profiles.

Engineer Tom Occhino explains it in a post on the Facebook blog: "Now, when you are writing a status update and want to add a friend's name to something you are posting, just include the "@" symbol beforehand. As you type the name of what you would like to reference, a drop-down menu will appear that allows you to choose from your list of friends and other connections, including groups, events, applications, and [fan] pages."

The feature will soon expand to third-party services that let you update your Facebook status, presumably including status message aggregators such as TweetDeck and Seesmic Desktop.

This is yet another sign that Facebook is gradually encroaching upon Twitter's territory in its attempt to own the web's trove of real-time conversation. Twitter is nowhere near the size of Facebook, nor is it anywhere near as feature-rich, but it's enough of a disruption in the space to make Facebook keep trying to get the upper hand.

This back-and-forth has included Facebook's failed attempt to buy Twitter, the "real-time stream" upgrades to the social network's home page, and its acquisition of FriendFeed, a streaming feed aggregator.

Comments

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  1. 1. Andrew

    Interesting.. like one massive game of social networking chess... personally twitter for me is for none personal contacts.. other's in my field, celebs etc and facebook is for my real world friends and contacts.... etc etc, that's the fundamental difference. If facebook continues to act like twitter i'm ditching it and trying something else.

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