- Reaction score
- 79
- Points
- 680
Hmm.. don't know what to say worked for me this spring in Gagetown.
Nfld Sapper said:Hmm.. don't know what to say worked for me this spring in Gagetown.
ArmyVern said:Yep, it worked for me here too.
I registered under my DIN addy, so the link was sent to me at work in PEI. I forwarded that email to myself at home.
Came home to Gagetown for the weekend, opened the link in the email I had sent home ... and it wouldn't work. So, I did what the linked email from Facebook told me to do (copied the web-addy link from the email and pasted it into my explorer bar & then hit enter) ... and then got in perfectly fine.
That's how it worked for me anyway.
NavComm said:. So I guess I'm not a real member of the CF according to the rules of the CF network admin on Facebook.
+1CDN Aviator said:Its only facebook.....
WHO CARES
"You got a Facebook and it's not on there, then it's not official," he said.
Cooper echoes: "If you want him or her to be exclusive then you need to put it out there."
...
The group, which has nearly 2,000 members, boasts ideas for Facebook to add to its lists of options for relationships.
Some of the ideas are "Has [insert name] wrapped around his/her finger," "Is seeing [...] but sssh don't tell" and "Is trying to figure out a way to break up with [...]"
Majka has some ideas of her own. "I wanted to be able to put multipeople" on the relationship status, she said. "Not for polygamy or anything, but for multiple dating."
...
Cooper would be lost without Facebook. "I'm not sure what they did before Facebook," he said.
Israeli defence chiefs have moved to tighten internet social networking rules after photographs appeared showing sensitive military subjects.
A review of Facebook pages belonging to Israeli troops found that some had posted detailed pictures of air bases, operations rooms and submarines.
"These are things we don't want the public to see for security reasons," an official source told the BBC. Posting photos of troops in uniform - a popular pastime - is still allowed.
The new set of rules - which has not been made public - includes a ban on images of pilots and members of special units, and anything that shows specific military manoeuvres.
Rite of passage
The defence ministry launched its inquiry earlier in the year to check the potential security risk in the dozens of social networking groups dedicated to life in the Israeli military.
Compulsory military service is a rite of passage experienced by large numbers of young Israelis and in recent years they have shared their experiences through photos
and web-posted accounts of their activities. "There's a lot of illegal photography inside the Israeli Defence Forces, including the Israeli Air Force," a source inside the air
force told the BBC. "Most of the soldiers don't understand how much damage it may cause," the source added.
Militants in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories are believed to monitor Israeli web forums and communities, including Facebook and the photo sharing site Flickr, to get information.
Enthusiasts
The military source, who cannot be identified, says a few of his comrades are authorised to take pictures at their bases and to post them on Flickr. Every photo is vetted
by military censors, and the ones considered appropriate are assured a warm reception by the many enthusiasts of military hardware in the Flickr community.
But the defence ministry says military tribunals have investigated and disciplined about 100 soldiers who broke the rules and unwittingly helped the enemy this year.
It may seem a large number, but the defence ministry source said: "Considering the number of soldiers there are with social networking websites, it is a tiny proportion."
The worst offenders were punished with a month in jail for particularly egregious posts, while others were warned they would face similar punishment if they re-offended.