Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

Facebook launches Timeline — in New Zealand

Add as a preferred source on Google
timeline-view
Image used with permission by copyright holder

All the way back in September, Facebook promised that we would all soon be basking in the scrollable glory of its new profile layout, known as Timeline. It’s going to be incredible, CEO Mark Zuckerberg told us. It will blow. Your. Mind.

Well, as of late yesterday, Facebook users can finally enable their Timelines — but only if you live in New Zealand. That’s right, New Zealand, the island nation with half as many people as New York City. Great. Thanks, Facebook — for nothing!

Recommended Videos

Actually, as Colleen Taylor at GigaOm reports, this is simply the first step in the Timeline rollout process, which means we’ll all be able to enjoy — or freak out about — the most major overhaul of the Facebook profile design since the social network launched in 2006. The reason for starting with New Zealand, says Facebook, is “because it’s English speaking, so we can read the feedback and make improvements quickly.”

“We announced Timeline in September and made it available to developers building apps on our platform,” writes Facebook’s Samuel Lessin on the company blog. “Since then, over a million people have signed up for the developer beta to access Timeline. The feedback we’ve received so far has been invaluable. Starting today, we are making Timeline more widely available as we measure speed and other types of performance. We’ll begin by making it available to people in New Zealand and then roll it out more broadly in the near future.”

You heard that? “The near future.” That sounds like a good thing. Of course, we’re Americans, dammit, and soon just isn’t soon enough, especially when some foreign race of kiwi-lovers already has access to this life-changing new feature. So rather than have a bit of patience, just check out our instructions for how to enable Timeline right now. You can thank us after the initial blast of staggering awesomeness wears off.

Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
Topics
Instagram and WhatsApp lead in sextortion reports, iMessage is weaponized against teenagers: Report
Over 2,000 complaints in six months, and the platforms are still playing catch-up.
Child using a blue phone

If you use Instagram, WhatsApp, or iMessage, you need to know what is happening on these platforms. Australia's online safety regulator, eSafety, has published a new transparency report, and the findings are grim. 

As reported by The Guardian, the regulator found significant gaps in how the biggest tech companies are handling online sexual extortion and child sexual exploitation, even as the reports keep climbing.

Read more
Europe plans a wide social media ban for children
The plan would bar kids under 13 from social media completely, with looser rules for teens up to 18.
Child using a red iPhone

Europe is taking its biggest step yet toward keeping kids off social media entirely. A panel of experts today handed the European Commission a report recommending sweeping new age restrictions, according to a New York Times report. Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is expected to turn those recommendations into a formal law proposal in September.

What the proposal aims to restrict

Read more
The days of unrestricted social media for children may be coming to an end
Social media could soon look very different for younger users
Social Media

What started as a policy experiment in Australia has quickly turned into a global movement. Governments around the world are increasingly questioning whether children should have unrestricted access to social media, with more than 20 countries now either enforcing, proposing, or actively debating age-based restrictions. According to an AFP tally, at least five countries already have nationwide restrictions in force, while many others - including several European nations - are preparing to follow suit.

The momentum comes amid growing concerns over the impact of social media on children's mental health, online safety, sleep patterns, and exposure to harmful content. Policymakers are also under pressure to address addictive recommendation algorithms, cyberbullying, and the growing use of AI-generated content that can make online platforms even harder for young users to navigate.

Read more