From technology to politics to video games; these are the random thoughts of a geek with too much time on his hands

image Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Windows Live Spaces, the list goes on.  These are the sites that everyone has been going bananas over for the past year or so.  Tons of money have been poured into these systems, and a lot of ink has been spent philosophizing over what they mean for the future of technology and how they're the Brave New World of personal information sharing and management.

The Social Networking site is the media darling of 2007 the way Blogs were the "big thing" in 2004 because of the US Presidential race.  Back then, Blog "networks" were the hot web property to own.  It was when the mainstream media and so many others realized that publishing opinion, news, information etc wasn't the exclusive domain of media organizations anymore, that the average Joe User could type away at home, push a button and suddenly have a global audience.

Blogs were big because they supposedly democratized the world of news reporting, though what it really did was open the flood gates to a lot of poorly reasoned analysis and a fair number of ignorant opinions being passed off as news and fact.

But now, in 2008 we can look back on the true boom of the Social Networking site.  Facebook was the poster-child of the feeding frenzy, and it made out quite well for itself financially in the process.  Now worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $15bn [1], Facebook is an incredibly valuable web property, only beaten by the likes of Amazon, eBay, Yahoo and Google.  Why is it that everyone has gone nuts about Facebook and to a lesser extent other Social Networking sites?

Well, to begin with there's the "oooh, shiny" factor.  While we've had social networking for years now with sites like MySpace, it's only recently that these sites became more than a toy for angsty teenagers looking to rebel against their parents and express their individuality through dark poetry, brooding photos and talk about how no one gets how hard it is to be a teenager.  In 2007, folks started to realize that you could build networks centered around things like business (LinkedIn) and academics (Facebook).  This revelation opened up the concept to the rest of the Internet using population, as well as those who had grown past sites like MySpace and were in search of a new site to reflect their own personal growth.

The basic idea behind Facebook, MySpace and others is pretty well understood.  In the real world, you are a member of a number of social networks (or circles), each defined by some common characteristic, some of which overlap in strange ways, and some which have nothing to do with one another.  Anyone who's ever had two friends who don't get along understand the concept immediately.  You have two social networks centered around each of those friends.  We form social networks around activities, games, jobs, classes, interests etc.  These sites translate those ethereal relationships into information you can see and track.

Now, take those seemingly unrelated networks, add in a bunch of friends and strangers with their own networks, and suddenly you begin to discover connections with people you never knew.  Now, not only are you able to track your personal networks, you can use the data available to form new networks, start new relationships and in general widen your social and professional horizons.  The more people you add to the system, the more connections there can be, the more potential value there is to becoming a member of the system.  Of course, that's an intangible value for the user, and what brings them to a site in the first place.

But what about the quantifiable value of this data?  Imagine you run a service where people willingly tell you everything there is to know about them, down to the details of their date the other night with the girl from their English 302 class.  Companies usually pay out the nose for that sort of detailed information.  Without it, they can only guess at what appeals to their customers and users.  These sites are so valuable because of the data they contain and have access to.  A Social Networking site  with enough users can do some very interesting things with data analysis.  Do you actually want to know what specific band, movie or book college students are most interested in?  How does that overlap with their geographic location, gender, race or political views?

The more complete a person's profile is, the more value they get out of the site because it opens up new connections.  On the other side, the more data the company has for each of its users, the more creative things they can do with analysis.  As value increases for the user, so does it for the site owner.  It's a unique system that can't necessarily exploit one side over the other.  If Facebook does something naughty with the data, it loses the trust of its users, and will lose some of their precious data.

It's also a system that resists tampering.  Once you pass a critical mass of users, individuals or companies can't attempt any meaningful manipulations of the system.  The more people you have involved, the less important/potentially damaging any one user becomes.  This also means that overall, information and data analysis extracted from the system is going to be largely accurate since falsified information, intentionally misleading details etc. are negated when averaged out against the mass of true and accurate information.

While the shine is wearing off, and social networking sites like Facebook are becoming as common and unexciting as a blog (to users at least), they continue to gain in value with each additional user connecting up.  In the case of Facebook, social peer pressure drives people to sign up.  If all of your friends use Facebook to organize events and parties, you either join up yourself, or get left out on real world happenings.  These sites are transforming from fun toys to social and professional utilities.

2007 was the year Facebook was big, and in the news all the time.  In 2008 it will become part of the status quo, less interesting to the media, and not the hot new thing to technophiles, but that doesn't mean its value is decreasing.  It actually grows constantly.  The question now is, can they effectively mine the mountain of data they have access to, to do new and interesting things?  Or will they aimlessly slap on additions and features that turn the site into a cluttered and confusing mess?

But regardless of what Facebook or MySpace does, we have reached a point where it will be very difficult for anyone new to break into the market and be able to take away market share.  The more data a user pours into a single site, the harder it is for them to switch.  Most users spend hours detailing their profile pages, sometimes days.  And to switch to a new site, their closest friends need to as well.  As momentum grows, it becomes virtually impossible for a newcomer to pop up on the scene and make a meaningful impact.

Facebook brought Social Networking out of the exclusive realm of teenagers and opened it up to just about everyone else.  It is turning that data into information it can put to good use, and through things like the application platform, making it available to some extent to external partners.  Sites like Facebook are finally beginning to exploit the potential of "The Cloud" and the vast amount of data available online.  Collecting it in one place, we can discover the hidden connections, find real trends, and discover true value of items, products and ideas we could only guess at before.

Just like web search faded from the foreground of cool and shiny things, social networking is going to get less attention in 2008, but it is quickly becoming part of the underlying fiber of the Internet, that we depend on to manage, index and use information.

1 - Arrington, Michael.  "Perspective: Facebook Is Now 5th Most Valuable U.S. Internet Company."  TechCrunch.com 25 October 2007 <http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/10/25/perspective-facebook-is-now-5th-most-valuable-us-internet-company/>


Comments (Page 1)
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on Jan 14, 2008

I am convinced that one day Facebook will reach self-awareness and take over the world. Or perhaps Facebook and Google (Foogle???) will be merged in an unholy experiment that will cause the new entity to become self-aware. Regardless, one day in the not too distant future you will wake up to the cheery glow of your monitor, telling you what you will do with your day. The instructions won't be authoritarian at all, but more helpful suggestions, all of which will make perfect sense, so of course you'll do them. Sort of a happy, compliant submission to a computerized hive mind.

This all knowing "mind" will know what's in your fridge, your nutritional and dietary requirements and your food preferences. Based on this it will say "Good morning, I think you would enjoy an omelette today with grapefruit on the side" and, because you happen to like those things, you'll gladly go make an omelette.

As you're getting ready to start your day, the computer will give you a quick once-over of your itinerary, important things to do today. It will suggest the best order in which to accomplish these tasks in order to give you the most free time possible, and remind you as you're going out the door to grab the skis you've forgotten about in the basement that need to be dropped off for sharpening.

As you hop into the car, there will be a "best-route" that's been determined based on current traffic congestion, and your itinerary for the day. You will gladly take this route, as of course you don't want to spend unecessary time in traffic, nor do you want to hit your various destinations out of order, requiring you to criss-cross different parts of town over again. The recommended course will be as elegant and efficient as possible, resulting in minimum travel time.

Once at work, this all knowing network will be readily accessible to you at all times, whether on your blackberry, cell phone, subdermally implanted I-pod, Xbox chip in your neck or any number of like devices (not to mention your workstation if you have a desk). Having access to this will make your efficiency and productivity skyrocket, as you will be able to query it for answers on just about any issue or problem that you don't have the answer to (as is alredy done with google in many respects, but this will be much more intuitive and accomodating to your requirements)

Furthermore, this network will also give you critical communication to your friends and loved ones. Your significant other will be able to contact you immediately depending on the severity of the situation- if it is an emergency like a car accident, the network will recognize the nature of the problem and interrupt you immediately. If it's a reminder to pick up the kids from soccer practice, the message will be routed to your e-mail for your perusal when you're not busy with work. Initially this kind of invasive feature will be deactivated by many users, but most will warm up to it as they learn it's many benefits.

Ultimately, this kind of friendly control will be seen not as control but as facillitating your lifestyle in a best-fit solution. It will cater to your needs, your intelligence, and your personality in such a way that it will never come across as controlling, but as a good friend who has your best interests in mind. Once this is done, people will voluntarily surrender much of their decision making to the network. Initially it will be simple things like the route to work and which shirt to wear (the network will have a MUCH better sense of fashion and what clothes work on you then you ever will), but over time you will gradually turn over more of your free-thought to it.

This will be how AI will conquer humanity.. and we will be quite happy with it too!

on Jan 14, 2008
Never been to Facebook.   
on Jan 15, 2008
Why would anyone in their right mind want to smear their lives across a public forum, and expose them selves to the commercial parasites that exist only to suck money out of your bank account by persuading you need something you actually don't?
on Jan 15, 2008
Ah, this reminds of a saying by Yogi Berra, "How are you going to stop the fans from going to the Ballpark if the don't want to go?"

People make choices and suffer whatever consequences occur, that's life. I on the other hand have never been to one of these Social Networking Sites, believe or not. Just to damn lazy.  
on Jan 15, 2008
Why would anyone in their right mind want to smear their lives across a public forum, and expose them selves to the commercial parasites that exist only to suck money out of your bank account by persuading you need something you actually don't?


How else will you know what the Jones's have? How else will they know that you're keeping up?
on Jan 15, 2008
Facebook gave me the willies at first when a 33-year-old friend of mine who acts like a teenager invited me to join. I was perplexed at all the people who volunteered so much information that's really nobody's business but their own (not that I've never done that in blogs, nooooo, heh). But what happened to the days when we were taught to be paranoid..."Don't tell anyone online where you live!" or, "Never give anyone online your full name !" ????

By the way, a friend of mine on Facebook once sent me a "gift" in the form of a yellow flower icon. I had no idea what that meant, and wondered how that could be a gift? So I looked as deeply into it as I had the energy to do, and all I could see was that my friend paid $1.00 to give the "gift" to me. An icon. Can anyone tell me what that's all about? Do I have some sort of tangible gift waiting for me somewhere? Or is it absolutely nothing, and this is one way for Facebook to get so stinking rich...by charging money for absolutely nothing?
on Jan 15, 2008
This will be how AI will conquer humanity.. and we will be quite happy with it too!


Not so very implausible...why conquer ala terminator,when you can cajole.  

I'm keeping google for now...facebook is going bye bye.
on Jan 15, 2008
I've connected to a lot of old friends through Facebook.  I'll stick with it.
on Jan 16, 2008
I was perplexed at all the people who volunteered so much information that's really nobody's business but their own (not that I've never done that in blogs, nooooo, heh). But what happened to the days when we were taught to be paranoid..."Don't tell anyone online where you live!" or, "Never give anyone online your full name !" ????


The same thing can be said for many sites, including personal blogs where people put out all the information they want.  People seem to generalize sites like Facebook as just a bunch of people posting stupid things.  Granted, there are people who do that, but for someone like myself it's a very useful professional and personal tool.

As Zubaz pointed out, you can easily connect with former/current classmates, co-workers, friends, family etc.


on Jan 25, 2008
on one side, atleast from facebook, I was curious on how "secure" the info on the web pages were from the general public.

I tried Googling myself multiple times, both with and with out quotes and snippets from my facebook. I even looked for images from pictures of myself.

Couldn't find a thing.
Its probably inherent in teh site's design, that one must log in to view anything and even once logged in, you can be prevented from seeing people's info (or specific selection of info).

Ive never seen anyone use it professinally. I'm curious how this works. I use it to keep in touch with my closests friends and nothing more

And from what I can tell The gift is just an Icon, Nothing else to it.
on Jan 25, 2008
I read this article in PC Pro magazine, some harsh words but some valid points also. Its a lengthly read, but do you agree?


Jon Honeyball is fed up of being poked, tickled and hugged, at least by mere acquaintances.

Am I the only person who's heartily bored with Facebook? I've been poked, SuperPoked, tagged, pinched, hugged, tickled, "pwn'ed" and even had sheep thrown at me. I've had fresh flowers sent, although with a million left to send you don't feel that special for it. I can see that Richard has added the Sketch Me application. Chris and Justin have received a new message. Kieran and Phil are now friends. Patricia has joined the group "Come and live with me" - sorry, my dear, but no. Richard wants to know "what sort of lover are you?", which is information he's unlikely to find out, even if he asks nicely. Alec has another new friend. Kristopher has some new graffiti.

Sean wants to know if he is like me, a question that's scary on more levels than I can imagine. Chris has scored four out of nine on the "Celebrities when they were young" application, which wasn't good enough to match Liam's score of 67%. And Vicky has thrown me a snowball.

It's rubbish. It's content-free, vapid twaddle. I joined only because I was being bombarded by emails from friends, colleagues and people I had bumped into in the pub who said I needed to be there, or be totally unhip. Since I define hipness, it was incumbent upon me to have a look. Now I've joined, I have even more email nonsense to deal with every day.

Worst of all, it appears you're either my friend or not. Maybe I'm a little old fashioned, but a friend is someone I know, care about and like spending time with. I have a smallish number of real friends, but a large group of acquaintances. Facebook makes


no such subtle distinction - you're either a friend or not. So I have a whole pile of people listed who are acquaintances, leaving me continually annoyed at the streams of irrelevant messages left on my Facebook wall and the complete lack of granularity.

Some people have hundreds, nay thousands, of "friends". Either they have an exceptionally vibrant and time-consuming social life, or they're prepared to have anyone join in, in some desperate attempt at propping up their feeble ego and self-worth by defining it in such a two-dimensional way as "number of friends".

Then there are the groups where like-minded people can chat about the same topic or interest. Sounds good in theory, but the content is non-existent. I tried a number of public groups, only to give up in sheer desperation. We had conferencing nearly a dozen years ago in the Cix system, which is still trundling along and is still far more effective than this upstart. Facebook does a fantastically bad job of attempting to replicate the Cix mindset, and falls so far short as to be laughable.

What's actually there? A whole heap of third-party crapware put together by spotty teenagers who think it's cool to get friends to put an electronic carrot up their e-nose. And then to spread this nonsense like spam-laden e-wildfire.

Oh, and Facebook messaging takes the biscuit. If you want to send me a message, use an email. Receiving an email telling me that a message is waiting for me on Facebook is the ultimate in offensive communication laziness, even if the message appears in the body of the email.

So what are we left with? A weak piece of nonsense, polluted by third-party applets of dubious value, all swimming around in a pea soup of self-generated trivia. Don't forget, we've had online communities before - Friends Reunited was the last one where the interest faded as soon as the content stopped appearing. Facebook will go the same way - quite how the founder thinks it can be worth $10 billion is beyond me. (And, yes, I'm mad as hell that I didn't dream up an equivalent but better solution a few years ago - I too could be worth $10 billion today.)

The problem is that Facebook makes the same mistakes all over again that have been made in the past. What we'll be left with is the smoking remains of an environment, with the advertisers picking over the rotting carcasses of the user profiles, looking for a juicy email address or phone number.

We deserve something better than this. Something bigger, more in depth, with proper management tools and the sort of granularity that stops all problems being answered by a large hammer. Yes, I can tell the difference between a friend and an acquaintance, thank you very much. That you can't shows the crashing simplicity of your design and points the way to a dark and dismal future. It's time to clean up the Facebook space before it's too late. But the window of opportunity is narrowing and is hopefully measured in mere weeks. I can't imagine I'll put up with this nonsense for much longer than that.



on Feb 10, 2008
yeah, these sites are loaded with junk, drivel, and idiot teenagers. But even with all that, I've reconnected with old friends, and have kept in touch with lifelong friends who are far away. And I also monitor my nephews and nieces... So they have their uses...
on Feb 11, 2008
Never been to Facebook.


Ditto, I think I just don't have enough time to waste my life online
on Feb 11, 2008
I spend most of my internet time here. Facebook? Meh.....no thanks. I'm too private a person.
on Feb 11, 2008

Wasn't it Facebook that got into a shit-load of trouble over the unlawful distribution of personal info...above and beyond what users were expecting?

...and had to do a massive about-face, etc?

Probably not my kind of place.....

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