Ends tomorrow:

Save 35% on an annual Digiday+ membership.

SUBSCRIBE

Facebook Wants You to Share Your Story

Facebook Feature du Jour: As you are probably aware by now, Facebook has announced yet another startling feature that many are not happy about having to get used to (which is the usual response to Facebook changes): “timeline.” Facebook has presented timeline as a fond catalogue of your whole Facebook past, a place to “tell your story.” It’s like a personal scrapbook of your (Facebook) life: you choose a cover photo, mark life events like marriage and moving to a new place. You can add apps to your timeline that let you interact with friends through the activities you post. For example, you can listen to a song your friend has put on their timeline. But is this really necessary? Well, of course not. Nothing that Facebook enables us to do is really necessary. So the real question is, is this a good thing?

Cell Service on Subways?: Cell phone service is coming to several subway platforms in New York City. Finally! Right? Or will this make subway platforms loud and annoying? Talk amongst yourselves. AM New York

Unlikely Twitter Trends: Yesterday one of the top-trending topics on Twitter in the U.S. was #replacefilmnameswithdildo. Yes, that’s right. It comes from the popular Twitter pastime of replacing one word for another. Good job everyone. The Daily Dot

Tumblr of the Day: Here’s one for the foodies. Eataku

Video of the Day: Andy Samberg as the Zuck during the opening the f8 conference.

More in Media

Why creator Lola Torres prefers the stability of affiliate marketing over brand partnerships

Creator Lola Torres on the hustle of building her career in affiliate marketing, the challenge of creator programs, and more.

Media Briefing: Perplexity’s new ‘trust and transparency’ pitch does little to win over publishers

Perplexity wants to be a trusted partner to publishers, but a growing list of copyright lawsuits are making that a difficult sell.

The case for and against publishers buying paid traffic 

For many audience development teams, the question is no longer whether to buy traffic, but how far they can push it.