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https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr
https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr
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https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr

Https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr May 2026

Beneath the polished surfaces of today’s Facebook app lies a ghost: the URL https://m.facebook.com/home.php?_rdr . At first glance, it looks like a broken link or a typo — missing slashes after https , a query parameter _rdr that few remember. But for those who used Facebook on early smartphones or low-bandwidth connections, this address was a lifeline.

m.facebook.com was Facebook’s mobile web gateway, a lightweight HTML portal designed for flip phones, BlackBerrys, and early Android browsers. /home.php pointed to the main newsfeed — the first thing you saw after logging in. And ?_rdr (short for “redirect”) told the server: “I’ve just come from a login page, send me home.” https //m.facebook.com/home.php _rdr

Today, typing that exact string (with the missing colon after https ) into a browser will fail. But correct it to https://m.facebook.com/home.php?_rdr , and Facebook will likely redirect you to the modern mobile site or prompt a login. The parameter still works in some legacy flows — a quiet nod to backward compatibility. Beneath the polished surfaces of today’s Facebook app


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