To begin with, I've already read the following topics:

Including this topic:

There are at least 25 apps hosted under dev.anuary.com host, sub domain of anuary.com. Neither of them ask for "like" action to be confirmed.

Worth mentioning, is that there is another website ( http://sinonimai.lt ) hosted on the same host, that had a fan base of 10 000+ people and was recently disabled by Facebook. I didn't manage to contact Facebook regarding either of the issues, therefore I simply took off the like-box from the latter website. Hopefully, temporarily.

enter image description here

The most annoying of all, is that even if you confirm the "like" action, "like" doesn't get submitted. I've tried on multiple friend accounts, different browsers (possible bug to report?).

I've ignored it for over a month. But it doesn't go away.


enter image description here

There are no hidden overlays, no bouding elements or anything that'd be considered unusual placement of the "like" button element. The website and the button itself has been placed very recently. The open-graph tags are in place and changing app ID doesn't change the behavior.

<meta property="og:title" content="Anuary"/>
<meta property="og:type" content="company"/>

<meta property="og:image" content="http://anuary.com/public/images/og-anuary-logo.jpg"/>
<meta property="og:url" content="http://anuary.com"/>
<meta property="fb:app_id" content="128740590570428"/>
<meta property="og:site_name" content="Anuary"/>
<meta property="og:description" content="Anuary is a company of accomplished developers and social media experts. We design engaging and innovative social media campaigns, for web and mobile, that are meant to interact with your targeted audience, through applications, websites, competitions and participation events. The objective being to spread the word about the product and increase loyalty to the advertised brand."/>

However, the page content is loaded dynamically. What Facebook parses sees is pretty much an empty page.

Can this be an issue?

link|improve this question

64% accept rate
What does the Facebook debugger tell you? – Lego Feb 7 at 22:23
@Lego, nothing that'd look unusual. See for yourself, developers.facebook.com/tools/debug/og/…. – Guy Feb 8 at 22:52
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted
+50

Unfortunately, I think you are running into a recent Facebook change/design decision. Here are a couple bug reports discussing this issue:

http://developers.facebook.com/bugs/274568892605777

http://developers.facebook.com/bugs/169544703153617

link|improve this answer
Well, if that is the case, then I can report a new bug, because I am the only person who clicks "unlike" after clicking "like" and only for purposes of dev. That'd be funny if they base their anti-spam behavior on one account actions. – Guy Feb 3 at 11:44
So you're manually liking and unliking the same URL multiple times? That's pretty consistent with what would happen if you were running a site that forced users to click like before continuing, or was using click-jacking, etc to force likes – Igy Feb 8 at 11:05
1  
@Igy, not exactly. That'd mean that one user can maliciously like and unlike content multiple times to black-shadow another website? – Guy Feb 8 at 22:46
@Igy, when you do detect suspicious activity, you should add timed restrictions. Now you are checking if people are going to "confirm" the like they've given. Most likely they won't (why waste time?). I guess your system then adds even more restrictions for the page (which is a deadend). You can also check how many times the page got into timed-lock period and, based on this, set further restrictions. – Guy Feb 13 at 15:21
feedback

Only simple minded folks like Igy would not think of such a thing. Igy do you work for facebook?

Your reply also makes no sense.

A test user liking and unliking to test their app has no intention to increase their 'Likes' count, thus its not really click-jacking. Click jacking is strictly those who trick their visitors into liking their page without their actual consent. There is nothing wrong with forcing the user to "like" a page to continue using their app. As long as the user is willing to, then its not click jacking.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Use the Facebook Debug tool to see what content is on the page. http://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug

It shows you what Facebook sees when it scrapes the page. It could help in identifying what the underlying issue is.

With regards to liking / unliking content multiple times, Facebook has some automatic features that prevent likes from showing up on Facebook, or indeed showing the 'Confirm' link you are seeing. This is mainly to combat click-jacking as this is a common problem with the Like button.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.