Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

  • Advertisements

Horizons

Update: The Facebook vanity URL landgrab

By Andrew Heining / June 15, 2009



Good weekend? Facebook was busy.

Skip to next paragraph

Recent posts

Just about six million of you spent at least some of it on the social networking site, snapping up real estate. That's the word from Mashable, who reports that in the first three minutes of Facebook vanity URL availability, some 200,000 "vanity urls" were registered.

What's the benefit of a Facebook vanity URL? Location, location, location.

"When your friends, family members or co-workers visit your profile or Pages on Facebook, they will be able to enter your username as part of the URL in their browser. This way people will have an easy-to-remember way to find you,” Facebook designer Blaise DiPersia wrote last week on the company blog.

The dilemma, of course, is what to pick. Many choose to go with something simple like a first and last name combination. Others, like Christine Shipley, opt for something a little more creative. The San Francisco resident chose facebook.com/default.aspx, making her address look like the default landing page of the site. (Though, as TechCrunch's MG Siegler points out, "savvy users will know that the site is written in PHP, and not ASP, which the .aspx extension suggests.")

Among the 194 million Facebook users yet to register a vanity url? Don't fret. Common names like Michael are taken, but more unique names (Dwight Schrute, I'm talking to you) are – for now – still available.

We're at facebook.com/christiansciencemonitor, if you were wondering. Stop by and say hello.

E-mail

Read Comments

View reader comments | Comment on this story

Photos of the day

05.27.12 »

Editors' Picks:

What happens when ordinary people decide to pay it forward? Extraordinary change. See how individuals are making a difference...

Pastor Jean Enock Joseph (c.) visits one of his projects in Croix-des-Bouquets, just outside Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital.

Jean Enock Joseph teaches self-help to lift Haiti

Pastor Jean Enock Joseph doesn't shy from Haiti's toughest problems. His message: Haitians have the ability to help themselves.

Become a fan! Follow us! YouTube Link up with us! See our feeds!