![]() I wonder if the two platforms will align one day? It seems ludicrous to make us include two, seeing as the resolutions are so similar. Twitter Card image size should be 1024 pixels by 512 pixels. It doesn’t take long to resize an OG image to a Twitter Card image. One thing to be aware of is that the OG image does not fit perfectly into a tweet – content can get cut off.įor a perfect fit, create separate images for the Open Graph image and the Twitter Card image. Twitter robots will default to Open Graph if they can’t find Twitter meta-tags called Twitter Cards. In my opinion, the small image doesn’t stand out as well. Instead of displaying full width, stacked under the text, the image will float to the left, in column format. When the image is less than 600 pixels in width, the Facebook posts display differently. Be aware of size complications on Twitter. LinkedIn, Pinterest and Twitter will also recognise an OG image when a page is shared. The landscape rectangle (1200 × 630 pixels) looks fantastic on Facebook shares, justifiably because Facebook develops the Open Graph system. The minimum requirement is 200 by 200 pixels. The recommended size is on the Facebook Developers page – Images in Link Shares. The suggested size for a Facebook Open Graph image is about 1200 pixels by 630 pixels and should not be more than 8 MB, so remember to optimise the image. I’ll also tell you how to add one to a WordPress page or post, as well as an HTML page. In this article, I show you OG image sizes and where they appear across the internet. What is a ‘search engine organic listing’?.To discuss this with the author, tweet go back to the home page. I’d especially like to hear from those currently working on the product. Make tools and settings which allow us to easily manage our Graph Search privacy.If a photo can’t be seen on my profile, don’t show it in a Graph Search.Graph Search, in it’s current implementation, breaks the privacy model.Summary (for those at Facebook working on Graph Search, feel free to bring these points up in your next meeting or standup): Regardless of your sharing preferences, you must agree: we deserve a system that respects our privacy. We expect that to mean only me, not me and people with Graph Search. Some of us have every possible privacy setting set to “Only Me”. But some of us, like my brother, do care. The majority of their users don’t seem to care about privacy, and that’s fine for them. Here’s the interface and a photo of me enjoying a cup of coffee:Ī “removal” tool that requires you to scroll through your timeline for 15+ minutes, mindlessly clicking check box after check box, is not a removal tool. I’ve used it myself and assisted multiple friends in untagging their newly searchable photos. “The new Request Removal Tool!”, you may cry. You may argue, “Even before Graph Search, Mallory could manually browse the public photos of Alice’s friends and view those photos of Alice.” While this is true, Graph Search makes this formerly Sisyphean task a matter of a few keystrokes. If Mallory can’t see a photo on Alice’s profile, don’t show it to Mallory in a “Photos of Alice” Graph Search. This would have prevented the disabling of my brother’s Facebook account and untagging of his photos that ensued. Luckily, a single predicate can realign the current implementation with my brother’s, and others’, expectations. ![]() Pesky privacy-conscious sibling not letting you view their photos? There’s a Graph Search for that.™ Lo and behold, despite my brother’s draconian privacy settings, despite his profile advertising to me “No photos to show”, that simple search provided dozens of never before seen photos of my fraternal twin. After exhausting the-surprisingly long-list of females under 30 living in San Francisco, who went to MIT and like Seinfeld, I went for something more mundane, but far more sinister. I was taking my new Graph Search invite for a spin. Facebook Graph Search Breaks Your Privacy Settings ![]()
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