NEW YORK -- Facebook, an online community now restricted mostly to high school and college studen... Facebook will expand eligi

Submitted by admin on Wed, 2006-09-13 11:00. ::

NEW YORK -- Facebook, an online community now restricted mostly to high school and college students, soon will throw its doors wide open and welcome millions of Internet users that had been left standing at the gates.

The move will allow existing users to invite ineligible friends, but it also risks changing the tone of a community in which trust and privacy are key. Last week, users revolted when Facebook introduced a feature that allows easier tracking of changes their friends make to personal profile pages.

To join Facebook, a user now must prove membership in an existing network using an e-mail address from a college, a high school or selected companies and organizations. That has largely limited membership to students, along with some faculty and alumni.

As a result, Facebook has fewer than 10 million registered users, compared with some 109 million at News Corp.'s MySpace, which has an open-door policy.

With the change, a user can simply join a regional network -- such as one for their country, state, metropolitan area or city. No authentication will be performed.

But unlike the case with MySpace and other open-community sites, users will be restricted in how much they can learn about others -- the way Harvard students can't automatically view a Stanford user's full profile page, which may include photos, contact information and other personal details.

Started by three Harvard sophomores in February 2004 as an online directory for college campuses, Facebook expanded to high schools last September and to selected companies and organizations earlier this year. Those users have been eligible to join regional networks as well when they graduate or move, and it is those networks that will be expanding soon.

Chris Hughes, co-founder of the Palo Alto-based company, said everyone around the world will be covered by one of some 500 regional networks, although some regions may cover one or more countries. U.S. regions, he said, are likely to be geographically smaller.

Facebook's chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, said users will be restricted in how often they can switch to discourage impostures and pranksters.

Earlier this month, Facebook introduced what it termed a time-saving feature. Users who log on might instantly find out that someone they know has joined a new social group, posted more photos or begun dating their best friend.

All of the information presented had been available before, but a person had to visit a friend's profile page and make note of any changes -- for example, noticing that the friend now has 103 friends instead of 102, and identifying which one was added.

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