Re: Is facebook on the wane?
Posted: Sat 31 Dec, 2011 12.14
The problem with Facebook is always the interaction between its privacy settings and UI. Five years ago, the news feed freaked people out not because it changed the low-level visibility of their stuff, but now it turned their every interaction into a 'story', pushing everything to everyone with no nuance. The difference between having your phone number listed publicly in the phonebook and having it rained down on the world as confetti, if you will.
Fast forward to now and the timeline is the same problem. Nothing has really changed, it's really just a glorified infinite scroll. I rather like the presentation of it, but now I can jump back four years and immediately cringe at the shite I was talking about. Anyone with enough determination could've seen these things, but now anyone with a fleeting interest can. Now yes, I can put a blanket silencer on it, but again we're back to a total lack of nuance. Actually, this is something I'm working on at the moment - the idea of privacy policies for content 'decaying', and whether you can model and predict, essentially, the half-life of a privacy setting.
Anyhoo...I don't see use of Facebook being on the wane. It's hard to gauge because it constantly tries to redefine itself from being a fairly static website to a platform for apps to scrape social data to an aggregator of every action one takes online, while it's still so (relatively) immature that people are still redefining how they actually use it, from mere profile stalking, to inane "just ate a sandwich lol" pish, to "here, have unfettered access to my music listening habits, please do something fun with it". At best, I can only really say it's changing, and absorbing a wider range of interactions, and I'm a little apprehensive about it. I'm not against there being a sort of 'social layer' to the web, but this would be the only de facto web infrastructure in the hands of a single company I can think of, and, well, that's a bit gash.
Fast forward to now and the timeline is the same problem. Nothing has really changed, it's really just a glorified infinite scroll. I rather like the presentation of it, but now I can jump back four years and immediately cringe at the shite I was talking about. Anyone with enough determination could've seen these things, but now anyone with a fleeting interest can. Now yes, I can put a blanket silencer on it, but again we're back to a total lack of nuance. Actually, this is something I'm working on at the moment - the idea of privacy policies for content 'decaying', and whether you can model and predict, essentially, the half-life of a privacy setting.
Anyhoo...I don't see use of Facebook being on the wane. It's hard to gauge because it constantly tries to redefine itself from being a fairly static website to a platform for apps to scrape social data to an aggregator of every action one takes online, while it's still so (relatively) immature that people are still redefining how they actually use it, from mere profile stalking, to inane "just ate a sandwich lol" pish, to "here, have unfettered access to my music listening habits, please do something fun with it". At best, I can only really say it's changing, and absorbing a wider range of interactions, and I'm a little apprehensive about it. I'm not against there being a sort of 'social layer' to the web, but this would be the only de facto web infrastructure in the hands of a single company I can think of, and, well, that's a bit gash.