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Old 05-28-2010, 09:00 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Talking Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook

Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook

Friday, 28 May, 2010

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Pakistani IT professionals Omer Zaheer (L) and Arslan Chaudhry browse their newly created networking site in Lahore. –Photo by AFP Metropolitan

Pakistanis outraged with Facebook over “blasphemous” caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed have created a spin-off networking site that they dream can connect the world's 1.6 billion Muslims, reports AFP.

A group of six young IT professionals from Lahore, the cultural and entertainment capital of Pakistan, Launched MillatFacebook.com - Social Networking Place for Every One on Tuesday for Muslims to interact online and protest against blasphemy.

The private venture came after a Pakistani court ordered a block on Facebook until May 31, following deep offence over an “Everyone Draw Mohammed Day” page considered “blasphemous” and “sacrilegious”.

“Millatfacebook is Pakistan's very own, first social networking site. A site for Muslims by Muslims where sweet people of other religions are also welcome,” the website tells people interested in signing up.

Dubbed MFB, after Facebook's moniker FB, its founder says professionals are working around the clock to offer features similar to those pioneered by the wildly popular California-based prototype.

Each member has a “wall” for friends to comment on. The site offers email, photo, video, chat and discussion board facilities.

The Urdu word “Millat” is used by Muslims to refer to their nation. The website claims to have attracted 4,300 members in the last three days — mostly English-speaking Pakistanis in their 20s.

The number of aficionados may be growing, but the community is a drop in the ocean of the 2.5 million Facebook fans in Pakistan and there have been some scathing early reviews of the start-up.

Neither has Facebook been immediately reachable for comment.

“We want to tell Facebook people 'if they mess with us they have to face the consequences',” said Usman Zaheer, the 24-year-old chief operating officer of the software house that hosts the new site.

“If someone commits blasphemy against our Prophet Mohammed then we will become his competitor and give him immense business loss,” he told AFP, dreaming of making “the largest Muslim social networking website”.

Once signed up, members are a click away from debate on the bulletin board.

For example, “Enticing Fury” wrote: “The reason is that this forum must be reserved for ALL MUSLIMS OF THE WORLD and not only Pakistan. So using the word MILLAT is very good!

“Well done guys. You have made a great alternative for the whole Muslim ummah (nation)!”

But the nascent quality of the work-in-progress website has preoccupied and dismayed some, as well as drawn at least one damning newspaper review.

One member wrote: “they need 2 have more info”.

Another posted a mournful: “need games here as well. I miss cafe world” referring to the popular Facebook page where members can run their own virtual cafe.

“It was a good idea... as it can give us a forum to connect, but its reach is too limited,” Mohammad Adeel, a 31-year-old pharmacist told AFP in Karachi, who joined to keep up with friends he missed due to the Facebook ban.

Local newspaper was crushing. “The quality of user experience is so abysmal that it does not merit the humble title, 'Facebook clone',” it wrote online.

“To sum up, MillatFacebook is a bold effort... but it is unlikely to capture a large audience, judging by the online experience it offers currently.”

But Zaheer is pleased with his handiwork, saying the site has already attracted members living in Britain, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Russia, the United Arab Emirates and the United States.

Pakistani law student Rana Adeel, 21, signed up to MillatFB in Lahore after receiving invites through SMS and email from friends.

“In two days, I got more than seven friends. If the Facebook ban is lifted, I'll keep networking on both,” he told AFP.

DAWN.COM | Sci-Tech | Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook
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Old 05-28-2010, 10:58 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Default Re: Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook

Good Show.

This is creativity and entrepreneurship at work.

A good take-off and a fitting reply.
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Old 05-29-2010, 01:34 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Default Re: Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook

A cheap rip off. The least they could have done was put some originality.

What if Facebook sues them for copyright violation!
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Old 06-14-2010, 10:47 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Default Re: Pakistanis create rival Muslim Facebook

'Halal' version of Facebook is a hit in Pakistan

Press Trust of India
June 14, 2010

The "halal" version of Facebook launched by Pakistanis last month after a ban was imposed on the social networking website for featuring blasphemous caricatures is going strong with 333,000 users having signed up at the last count.

Millatfacebook.com, or "MFB" for short, was launched by six tech-savvy Pakistanis following a furore over the caricatures of Prophet Mohammed on Facebook.

The Urdu word "millat" is used by Muslims to refer to their nation.

"Dear brother/sister, congratulations and salam to over 330,000 Muslims already united as one Millat/Ummah at MFB.

"Now we are doing an upgrade to ensure high speed for all our Muslim community..." reads a note by the creators on MFB.

Though thousands of Pakistanis have joined MFB, not many have given a thumbs-up to it.

"The Halal Facebook for Pakistan? Soon there will be gender segregation there!" remarked an avid Facebook user in an online discussion on MFB.

"We don't need another social network," said another Facebooker.

To join MFB, users are expected to "respect humanity," "respect beliefs of all people" and "not disrespect anyone".

Though MFB has been dismissed by many as a poor Facebook clone, the number of users is rising by the day.

"Millatfacebook is Pakistan's very own, first social networking site. A site for Muslims by Muslims where sweet people of other religions are also welcome," reads the welcome note at MFB, which aims to cater to 1.57 billion Muslims around the world.

Like Facebook, each member has a "wall" for friends to comment on.

The site offers e-mail, photo, video, chat and discussion board facilities as well.

Last month, a Pakistan court briefly blocked access to Facebook due to a contest for blasphemous caricatures.

Some furious Internet users responded by shutting down their Facebook accounts, but Omer Zaheer Meer, one of the founders of MFB, decided to take a more practical approach and set up his own alternative.

"Basically the objective is to provide a platform for all people, not only Muslims, but nice and decent people of all faiths, to come together and interact in a way that is socially responsible by providing them all the freedom of expression (while) respecting each other's sensitivities and faiths...," Meer told a local newspaper.

MFB's administrators have blamed the CIA for posting Prophet Mohammed's caricatures, saying they have proof the IP address used for this purpose was connected to US secret services.

Facebook has yet to respond to its new Pakistani rival but Meer is confident his project will have a significant impact on the US-based company.

'Halal' version of Facebook is a hit in Pakistan
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