Be warned, all gamers !

he wasn't really looking then, because paypal will pop up with a "transaction receipt" before purchases, whether you are logged in or not.
 
Wow, what a insult, facebook and gamers in one sentance.

:wtf:

And yes dumbass parents.
 
I wonder if all these internet heroes blaming parents for everything have ever brought up a child.
 
Who in their right mind stores their paypal info? And in any case, you were not close enough if you did not see the ,usually glaringly obvious, paypal screens popping up...
 
My biggest 2 questions are :

why allow your pc to remember your paypal login?
why is a 7 year old allowed access to facebook? (even if it's someone else's account)
 
My biggest 2 questions are :

why allow your pc to remember your paypal login?
why is a 7 year old allowed access to facebook? (even if it's someone else's account)

Is there prawn on facebook? iirc, the k@k games they have on there can be played by a 7 year old... :confused:
 
LoL, tried to create an account with birth year as 1999 -> Sorry, you are ineligible to sign up for Facebook.

Hahaha! I just checked now...the year is a combo (dropdown) that includes 2010...why do they even list that (Hi I'm Jimmy and I'm a 1 year old that likes fishing and driving fast cars). Funnily enough I always use 1 Jan 1970 whenever I'm asked my date of birth online (so much easier than choosing the real date anyway).
 
How is this a warning to all gamers? Real games don't do facetube. ;)

Um, you might wanna start looking for a new name then....

http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=445549720962
Zynga’s value overtakes EA’s

Zynga, the company that fills up your Facebook profile with obnoxious requests to join the games it makes (most famously FarmVille) has reached a value of $5.51 billion. That puts it slightly ahead of Electronic Arts’ stock-market value of $5.22 billion.

Zynga is still far behind Activision, which is valued at $13.9 billion. In the world of evil video game empires, the “casual” games company still has a long way to go. Still, the trends towards small development costs and microtransactions is obvious.

Nintendo’s market cap, meanwhile, sits at $34 billion, so the sky hasn’t completely fallen quite yet.
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X