Facebook
founder, Mark Zuckerberg, Friday, added Hausa language, Fula, and two others,
Maltese and Corsican to Facebook, making the social media platform become
available in more than 100 languages. Facebook Founder, Mark Zuckerberg visits
President Muhammadu Buhari in Aso Villa on Friday, September 2, 2016. Facebook
Founder, Mark Zuckerberg visits President Muhammadu Buhari in Aso Villa on
Friday, September 2, 2016. Zuckerberg announced this yesterday where he
expressed optimism that the addition has halted the disappearance of some of
the added languages. “Facebook is now available in more than 100 languages —
with more than one billion people using a language other than English! Today we
added Fula, Maltese and Corsican.” “Our community makes this possible. Over the
last decade, hundreds of thousands of people around the world have worked
together to find the right translations for words and phrases in the Facebook
interface. Because the idea of a “Like” in English may mean something different
in Arabic or Japanese.” The Fula language, also known as Fulani, is a non-tonal
language spoken in Northeastern Nigeria and in a continuum that stretches
across some 20 countries of Western Africa and Central Africa. Spoken as a
first language by the Fula people, it is also spoken as a second language by
various peoples like the Kirdi of Northern Cameroon. Recall that Zuckerberg who
visited Nigeria on August 30th where he met with software developers and ICT
entrepreneurs in Lagos pledged to use Nigerian languages in offering services
on Facebook. However, on the reasons for the added languages, he said, ” For
people to share what matters to them and see what matters to the people they
care about, they need services available in a language they know. Some of the
languages we’ve added don’t have meaningful presence on the internet.” “Others,
like Corsican, are in danger of disappearing altogether, according to UNESCO.”
Zuckerberg also reiterated this resolve to make the platform available to
people no matter where they are on the globe. “So thanks to everyone in our
community for helping us hit this milestone of 100 languages! We’ll keep
working to open up our community to everyone – no matter where they live or
what language they speak.”
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