Facebook
CEO, Mark Zuckerberg is asking Facebook’s 1.3 billion users to donate
any amount of their choice to fight the deadly Ebola virus.
He said Facebook will publish a donate button across the top of its users’ News Feeds beginning Thursday, as part of the company’s effort to quell the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. Facebook will prompt users to make a donation and then share that news with others on the service in the hopes of spreading the word, explains Naomi Gleit, Facebook’s VP of product management.
He said Facebook will publish a donate button across the top of its users’ News Feeds beginning Thursday, as part of the company’s effort to quell the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. Facebook will prompt users to make a donation and then share that news with others on the service in the hopes of spreading the word, explains Naomi Gleit, Facebook’s VP of product management.
With
the donation button, which will live on the site for about a week,
users can direct their money to three different charities: the American
Red Cross; the International Medical Corps, and Save the Children.
The company is also donating 100 wireless hotspots to areas in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone where first responders are stationed. The hotspots will provide voice and data services to those on the ground, says Chris Daniels, VP of Internet.org, the company’s initiative to get the entire world online.
The company is also donating 100 wireless hotspots to areas in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone where first responders are stationed. The hotspots will provide voice and data services to those on the ground, says Chris Daniels, VP of Internet.org, the company’s initiative to get the entire world online.
Facebook
is also utilizing its ad technology to target specific users with
educational materials about Ebola. For example, users in Sierra Leone
will see explanatory messages fromUNICEF, a United Nations relief
organization, in their feed as part of an educational push, says Gleit.
While
Africa is a much smaller market for Facebook than North America, Europe
or Asia, more than 100 million people there use Facebook every month,
roughly half of the continent’s internet users.
And
while Ebola is an obvious area of focus now, Facebook wants to make
these kinds of humanitarian efforts more often, says Gleit. “It’s part
of a larger effort to do more [in the future],” she added.
Source: AIT NEWS
Source: AIT NEWS
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