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  • Facebook has made itself so necessary to the online experience that for many people it

  • is the internet.

  • And that is causing some major problems when it comes to user data, and security.

  • You can trace a lot of these problems to a phenomenon calledthe network effect”.

  • I think the first time I ever read about this, they were talking about fax machines, right.

  • The first fax machine is invented, it's totally useless.

  • But the more people who have it,

  • the more useful it becomes, because you can communicate with other people.

  • Facebook is network effects on steroids, right?

  • It's an event calendar, a contact book, a photo album, it's texting, video calling,

  • money transferring SOCIAL NETWORK that makes millions of dollars a day.

  • “A million dollars isn't cool, you know what's cool?”

  • Two billion people!

  • And at that size the network effects push Facebook beyond useful, to pretty much being

  • integral to daily life.

  • It's not just that you personally would miss stuff if you went off Facebook, but it would

  • almost be rude, right?

  • It could be an inconvenience to your peers, for you to not be on Facebook, because then

  • they couldn't invite you to things that way.

  • So you create a problem for yourself, and you create a problem for other people by opting

  • out of it.

  • This FOMO is how Facebook turns the network effect into profit.

  • Even though no one pays to use the core service.

  • But advertisers, marketers, and other folks WILL pay.

  • For user data.

  • And because users feel that the free core service is so beneficial, they agree to pay,

  • in a sense, by providing that data.

  • Yeah.

  • Read those Terms of Service.

  • What happened with Cambridge Analytica illustrates how our personal boundaries for using that

  • data in the real world are being tested.

  • The consulting firm, hired by the Trump campaign for the 2016 election, exploited access to

  • the data of millions Facebook users.

  • Now, Facebook allows academic researchers more access to user data than commercial companies

  • and app developers.

  • So a researcher built this personality quiz app under those guidelines. People used it

  • and in doing so, allowed it to harvest data from their Facebook profiles. But no

  • one really read the Terms of Service, because it also gave the app access to some data on the friends

  • of the people who took the quiz.

  • These are friends, who did not directly consent to the terms of the app.

  • Only 270 thousand people took the quiz, but by Facebook's latest estimate,

  • the app was able to harvest

  • the data of at least 87 million users.

  • Here's the kicker: this was all above boardthe data collection didn't violate any rules.

  • But what wasn't allowed was handing over that data, collected forresearch purposes”,

  • to Cambridge Analytica.

  • And when it came out that Cambridge used all this data to develop techniques to target

  • voters during the 2016 election, people were not happy.

  • And users wanted to know why Facebook was allowed to do this.

  • When you have executives saying, "It's our

  • responsibility to do x."

  • A good question to ask is, in what sense is it your responsibility?

  • Is it your legal responsibility?

  • Or are you just saying you'll feel bad?

  • The situation with Facebook is unique,

  • in that there are no legal responsibilities. At all.

  • Which is different from financial institutions, medical records, other kinds of things like that.

  • Even though angering its users might seem bad for business, Facebook isn't doing anything

  • unexpected here in regards to your data.

  • Because the aunts and high school friends and work acquaintances on Facebook aren't

  • just the users of the platform.

  • They're also the product.

  • And Facebook sells that productall of that datato advertisers who want information

  • about potential customers.

  • Which is how Facebook makes millions daily without charging you to use it.

  • When you look at it this way, Facebook is very, very good at what it doeseven if

  • the people spending the most time on it don't actually like it that much.

  • And that's why I think it's important to see that as far as we can tell from the research that's available,

  • Facebook is not really good for its customers, it makes people feel lonely and depressed.

  • Matt's referring to this study, by the University of Copenhagen.

  • It compared how participants

  • self reported various emotions before and after quitting facebook for a week.

  • It's a good reminder that,

  • while Facebook does exist to connect you with friends,

  • and help you find events,

  • that's secondary to the platform's business goal of mining your data.

  • Put another way: Facebook only cares that you're using Facebook, not whether you like

  • to use Facebook.

  • Which is why the main selling point is that everyone is on Facebook.

  • Because at roughly two billion usersthose network effects likely aren't going anywhere.

  • And whether you like them or not, you probably aren't going anywhere either.

Facebook has made itself so necessary to the online experience that for many people it

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Facebookを嫌いになっても使い続ける理由 (Why you keep using Facebook, even if you hate it)

  • 45 5
    Samuel に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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