This makes Facebook cleaner and much more enjoyable for everyone. This means that those who made their own comments on the original posting will not be notified. And here’s the nice part: Only you and any others who have replied to the comment will be notified about it! What happens when others make a reply to the original comment? It will be listed under the comment, beneath your reply. Their reply now will be displayed just beneath yours. If someone now wants to reply to your reply, they click on Reply beneath your reply: This is also a way to get a discussion thread going. Now, only the person who wrote that particular comment will be notified, and not everybody else who have written comments on the original posting. Hit Enter, or the Post button your Facebook app, and your reply will now be directly beneath that comment: Now, type your reply in this comment field instead: So how do you reply to a comment, instead of the original posting? Simple. One telling him that he has been tagged, and another telling him that someone has replied to the original posting. In addition, the person you tagged will get two notifications.
You are replying to one specific comment. Everybody who have commented on the original posting will now get a notification that someone else has commented. Some of you try to remedy that by tagging the person who made the comment you’re replying to. And everybody will be confused about who you are replying to. What will happen? Well, everybody who has commented on the original posting will now get a notification that someone else has commented. And that’s where things go wrong.ĭo not type your reply as a new comment like this: Instead, they are replying to one of the comments. However, very often people are not replying to the original posting. Now everybody who has commented on the original posting will get a notification that I’ve posted a new comment. If you want to comment on the original posting, you do it like this: This is the point where a lot of people get this wrong. Here we have a posting on Facebook, with comments: This is how you comment on postings on Facebook.
And by that I mean you have probably replied to a comment in the wrong way more than once.
Because you have most likely done the same thing. You are constant bothered by notifications when people comment on the original posting. But the well formed and well placed comment that you are so satisfied with suddenly becomes a small nightmare. Run an antivirus scan immediately.I’m sure you many times have replied to a comment someone has made on a posting on Facebook. Shut down the site and restart your computer. If you try to exit out to close the page, and another page pops up, you may have a virus.
WHEN I CLICK ON SOMEONES COMMENT IT DOESNT GO TO IT FREE
But there are many people who wish to believe in some hidden form of free energy. Solar panels are not free, so the energy still costs you money. Anything that promotes free energy is a scam. If you see the words: “weird” or “trick,” and especially if you see “weird trick” it’s a scam, don’t fall for it. The only reason they would do this is to prevent you from copying the text, and to prevent computer robots from reading it. Many scam sites and many scams on Craigslist do this. You can’t copy and paste names or numbers because the text is really part of a photo instead of real text. The text is photographed onto the page. Popups that try to get you to sign up for their propaganda or “free updates” before you even get a chance to read the article. You want to leave the page, but keep hitting up against something like, “Are you sure you want to leave this page?” Legitimate sites don’t do this, but nearly all of the scam sites do. They will never give you the information that you clicked on the link to get - not even if you send them money. That’s because they are only going to give you a long list of reasons telling you why you should send them money. You can’t fast forward, pause or even tell how long the video is. If it plays a video that has the controls removed, it’s a scam - stop watching. Here are his “Top 10 Signs the Site is Not Legit”: It is a great question, and my friend and colleague Doug Alton’s weekly Household Newsletter has the answer. Every day, millions of people get sucked into Internet scams and tricks that end up costing them dearly, something I was reminded of when I got a letter from a reader asking this question: How can I know if something on the Internet is legit or some kind of scam?