NEW YORK – Facebook is redesigning the profile pages
of its 500 million-plus users to make it more of a reflection of their
real lives and emphasize one of the site's most popular features,
photos.
Facebook said in a blog post Sunday the changes are
meant to make it easier for users to tell their story — who they are,
where they work, their life philosophy and the most important people in
their lives. The changes place a bigger emphasis on visuals, from photos
to images of users' interests.
A new biography section includes not just who you are
and where you live but a set of the most recent photos that your
friends have "tagged" you in. Previously users had to click on a tab to
see the latest photos on a profile. Users can also feature important
friends in their profile, while previously only random selection
appeared. And in addition to listing their job, users can now add the
projects they worked on. It's all a move toward curating a more complete
picture of a person, something that will likely appeal to Facebook's
advertisers. The company did not make any changes to its privacy policy
as part of the redesign.
Facebook unveiled the changes ahead of an appearance on 60 Minutes by CEO Mark Zuckerberg Sunday evening. Zuckerberg,
26, talked about the profile page redesign, Facebook's hard-working
culture of all-night coding sessions, as well as his take on "The Social
Network," the movie about Facebook's beginning that doesn't cast him in
a very flattering light.
"I think that they got every single T-shirt that they
had the Mark Zuckerberg character wearing right. I think I actually own
those T-shirts," Zuckerberg told 60 Minutes' Lesley Stahl in the
interview.
"But I mean, there are hugely basic things that they
got wrong, too," he added. "(They) made it seem like my whole motivation
for building Facebook was so I could get girls, right? And they
completely left out the fact that my girlfriend, I've been dating since
before I started Facebook."
Asked about a Facebook IPO, Zuckerberg said "You know, maybe."
"A lot of people who I think build start-ups or
companies think that selling the company or going public is this
endpoint," he said. "Right, it's like you win when you go public. And
that's just not how I see it."
On Facebook, even small changes to users' home pages
tend to meet with protests from a small but vocal fraction of users who
want things to stay the way they are. In an attempt to pre-empt this,
Facebook is rolling out the changes slowly, letting users — for the time
being — decide whether they want to display the new profile layout or
the old one. The new layout will be available to all users by early next
year, the company said.
The latest changes come as Facebook intensifies its
competition with online search leader Google Inc. as the primary
destination for anyone using the Internet. The changes streamline users
profile pages so it's easier to see the things that matter the most,
rather than a chronological stream of the latest wall posts, links and
photos they posted. Users can also see how their Facebook lives
intertwine with their friends by clicking on a "See Friendship" link on
the top right hand page of their friends' profiles.
"You can see all the things that you have in common
with that person," Zuckerberg said. "And it's just like, it gives you
this amazing connection with that person in a way that the current
version of the profile that we have today just doesn't do."