Related News: Facebook Beats In Q2 With $2.91 Billion In Revenue, 62% Of Ad Revenue From Mobile, 1.32B Users

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. TechCrunch published an article titled Facebook Beats In Q2 With $2.91 Billion In Revenue, 62% Of Ad Revenue From Mobile, 1.32B Users.

Facebook’s earnings beat projections for the 8th quarter straight with $2.91B in revenue and $0.42EPS in Q2 2014. The service is growing about twice as fast on mobile compared to its services as a whole. Facebook now has 1.07 billion mobile monthly users, and 654 million daily mobile users. That helped it bring in 62% of its ad revenue from mobile. In total, Facebook now has 1.32 billion monthly users and 829 million daily users, or 63% of users returning each day. It beat Wall Street’s estimates of $2.81 billion in revenue and $0.32 EPS.

Source: TechCrunch

Related News: State Supreme Court reinstates Mobile man’s child rape conviction, life prison sentence

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. AL.com published an article titled State Supreme Court reinstates Mobile man’s child rape conviction, life prison sentence.

The Alabama Supreme Court on Friday reversed an appeals court decision and reinstated the conviction and life sentence of a man found guilty of raping a young relative.

The decision, which came on an 8-1 vote, means that Rickey Cleston Woods, 54, will resume a sentence of life in prison without possibility of parole.

Source: AL.com

Related News: Jurors find former Mobile County commissioner guilty of enticing a child for sex

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. AL.com published an article titled Jurors find former Mobile County commissioner guilty of enticing a child for sex.

Jockisch, 69, was arrested last fall, five months after he answered a casual encounter ad on Craigslist, according to testimony. In July 2013 he started corresponding with a 15-year-old girl.

The girl turned out to be an undercover FBI agent.

Source: AL.com

Related News: Substitute teacher pleads not guilty to sex with 3 young Mobile teens

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. AL.com published an article titled Substitute teacher pleads not guilty to sex with 3 young Mobile teens.

The woman accused of sexually abusing three young boys while working as a substitute teacher for the Mobile County Public Schools System pleaded not guilty on Tuesday.

Kristina McMillan Kelly, 41, was not in court for the arraignment. Her attorney, Shane Taylor, entered the plea on her behalf.

Source: AL.com

Related News: Does Facebook have your payment details? It wants you to go buy stuff

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Ars Technica published an article titled Does Facebook have your payment details? It wants you to go buy stuff.

On Thursday, Facebook confirmed to the Wall Street Journal that it plans on testing “a new payments product that would allow online shoppers to make purchases on mobile apps using their Facebook login information.”

Source: Ars Technica

Related News: Where Teens Go Instead of Facebook (and Why You Should Too)

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Yahoo! News published an article titled Where Teens Go Instead of Facebook (and Why You Should Too).

Remember a few years back, when teenagers left MySpace in droves for this new thing called Facebook? Grown-ups soon followed suit (not that they were ever much on MySpace), and joined Facebook by the hundreds of millions – which made it far less cool for their kids. So where on the Web are teens going now, and what can you learn from them?

A recent study from the Pew Internet & American Life Project found that 94% of American teens still have a Facebook account, but they’re using it less, and using it more carefully. More than half have tightened down their privacy settings and regularly delete or edit previous posts.

Source: Yahoo! News

Related News: Juvenile advocate guilty in child sex assault

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. WSFA published an article titled Juvenile advocate guilty in child sex assault.

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) – An employee of the juvenile court’s Youth Advocacy Program has been found guilty of sodomizing two teenage girls.

Sherman Tate appeared in court Thursday and was acquitted of a rape charge. Both girls were students at Mobile’s Point Academy, a school for troubled youth, when the assaults occurred in 2010. The girls testified that 38-year-old Tate had assaulted them on several occasions.

Source: WSFA

Related News: FTC’s Second Kids’ App Report Finds Little Progress in Addressing Privacy Concerns Surrounding Mobile Applications for Children

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. The Federal Trade Commission published an article titled FTC’s Second Kids’ App Report Finds Little Progress in Addressing Privacy Concerns Surrounding Mobile Applications for Children.

The Federal Trade Commission issued a new staff report, “Mobile Apps for Kids: Disclosures report coverStill Not Making the Grade,” examining the privacy disclosures and practices of apps offered for children in the Google Play and Apple App stores.  The report details the results of the FTC’s second survey of kids’ mobile apps.

Since FTC staff’s first survey of kids’ mobile apps in 2011, staff found little progress toward giving parents the information they need to determine what data is being collected from their children, how it is being shared, or who will have access to it.  The report also finds that many of the apps surveyed included interactive features, such as connecting to social media, and sent information from the mobile device to ad networks, analytics companies, or other third parties, without disclosing these practices to parents.

Source: Federal Trade Commission

Related News: Facebook Wants Your Phone Number

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled Facebook Wants Your Phone Number.

As part of a new security initiative, Facebook wants your phone number. It claims that it will help you recover your account in the event of an emergency—but should you hand it over?

Source: Gizmodo