THE HARSH TRUTH ABOUT FACEBOOK WILL BE HEAVILY REVEALED IN 2018
BY JOE MARTINO
What is Facebook? What did it start out as, and what has it become?
Everything evolves � we know that. Sometimes what we set out to do in our initial intentions
changes and becomes something different. In business it�s called pivoting; in real life
it�s called reflecting on whether there is any meaning, value, or purpose to what
we�re doing, and whether this matches our initial intentions.
When Facebook began in 2004, it was a platform for people to stay connected in a meaningful
way, specifically students enrolled in post-secondary school. By 2007, Facebook opened its platform
up to the public and began on-boarding users like crazy. It quickly became the largest
and most influential social media network in the world, now serving over 2 billion users.
I remember those days. The people you connected with, the pages you chose to follow � you
actually saw what they posted. Point blank, you saw what you cared about and wanted to
see. Now though, it�s quite different. This is where Facebook faces its greatest challenges.
I also feel this is where they are most heavily lying to the public.
To preface, this is not a Facebook smear piece. Facebook has been a valuable network to share
information to millions and create some incredible change in the world. However, things have
changed dramatically since Facebook went public and moved under the thumb of intelligence
agencies.
Convenient Newsroom Information Facebook has consistently told the world that
users provide valuable feedback about what they want changed on Facebook, and then Facebook
follows up. However, the changes also seem to align with greater profits and a poorer
user experience. We never actually see the results of this apparent feedback Facebook
claims to be getting. We simply get statements like �Maintaining a relevant and interesting
News Feed is important to satisfying users.�
Now Facebook has a huge job on their hands. They must sort through the millions of posts
posted every day and place the meaningful ones in front of the right people. But there
is a problem with this. Facebook doesn�t have to sort through millions of posts for
each user, they simply need to sort through the couple thousand or less that each user
is technically subscribed to. Allow me to explain.
The average Facebook user has 155 friends. I could not find 2017 stats, but as of 2013
the average user Likes about 70 pages. Again, a stat I can�t find is how often a Facebook
user posts on Facebook per day, but brands, on average, post about 10 times per day. So
in any given day, if we assumed every brand a user liked posted 10 times and every friend
posted twice, a user would have to sift through a little over 1,000 posts. Given the average
user spends about 50 minutes per day on its platforms, a user would have about 2.5 � 3
seconds per post if they were fed all 1,000 posts.
Interestingly, Facebook sees value in a number that small, as video views are tallied when
a user spends just three seconds watching. So if the newsfeed really only has to sift
through about 1,000 posts per user, based on what a user ACTUALLY has chosen to connect
with, why do they claim it has such a hard time showing users what they want? Think about
it: Even if the newsfeed had a whopping 100% organic reach on every post from every person,
brand, or page a user likes, the average user would only have to sift through about 1,000
posts per day.
Facebook took the path of pulling out users� interests and replacing them with posts users
may or may not like from who knows where. On the flip side, this has allowed them to
charge brands to reach their audience; the same audience that asked Facebook to show
them their posts in the first place.
Have You Noticed the Newsfeed Does Not Work as Advertised?
This is where things get interesting and where I feel Facebook is going to reach its demise
in 2018 in a big way. But first let�s turn to a harsh reality.
Facebook is �ripping apart the social fabric.� Those are the words of Chamath Palihapitiya,
the company�s former vice president of user growth. Why would this be said about a company
whose mission is to apparently �build global community?�
Because Facebook�a actions do not align with their mission; they align with intelligence
agencies, political pressure, and stock holders.
Once again, �It literally changes your relationship with society, with each other � God only
knows what it�s doing to our children�s brains,� says Sean Parker, Facebook�s
former president.
But let�s reflect here. Is this not showing us on a global scale what happens when our
initial intentions and passionate hearts are set aside in favour of appeasing the destructive
nature of politics, financial greed, and big brother? This doesn�t happen only to a company
like Facebook, this happens all over the place. We are willing to give up true connection,
community, value, and overall societal health in the name of money, power, and control.
Facebook claims its algorithm is designed to show you relevant posts from the people
and brands you want to see them from, but do you actually see that? I see posts from
people I never engage with. I see ads. I see, for lack of a better term, meaningless drivel
from brands that I don�t �Like� on Facebook nor care about. Now, there is nothing wrong
with ads, but why can�t a user see what they want?
How is a newsfeed, apparently designed for a user, filled with so many unwanted posts?
Whereas, when a user not only likes a specific group or page, but also asks to see that FIRST
in their newsfeed, it�s not seen. How is that possible? Simply put, the newsfeed does
not work as advertised, nor is it designed to provide the user with what they want. Which
goes along with the harsh reality that Facebook likely does not give users the truth about
why it�s making changes.
But I can�t blame them. They have to appease stockholders, and so stripping brands from
the newsfeed makes sense. But it detracts from their mission and value, as now, users
don�t get what they want. People loved Facebook because they could be informed and get updates
from things they care about, and brands were largely responsible for helping to build Facebook
to begin with.
The average user is left with mindless content they often don�t really care about, which
is why we get the types of quotes we get from the executives above. It seems, for the large
part, Facebook has chosen to feed users things they don�t want in exchange for making more
money, and in turn users have to go out of their way to get content they want. Now, the
average user should do that, but we don�t. Instead we just look at what we�re fed and
thus this is why I feel we are seeing the types of mental and emotional challenges we�re
seeing from Facebook use.
What if we were given posts we wanted, that helped us learn, stay informed, and explore
what�s happening in our world in a more meaningful way rather than simply posts from
our friends about what they ate today, where they are going, and other mindless posts that
are said to be �feel good� yet are not when read in excess. Might this produce a
more exercised, informed, and engaged mind?
The Days of Getting Your News From Facebook Are Over
This seems to be the case because there simply isn�t any news in newsfeeds anymore, it�s
just statuses, images, and posts that aren�t all that relevant to what�s happening in
the world. Users will likely have to go back to visiting news sites directly to stay informed
or utilizing emails lists from brands they like to stay updated with.
2018 Will Reveal This Truth More Clearly You won�t hear it like this from your average
news outlet, because their focus will be on business or general thinking. But the reality
is, on a deeper level, Facebook has been a huge reflection of humanity. A way to see
what happens when we focus so deeply on distracting content, comparing ourselves to others, choosing
mindless entertainment over value and learning. It shows us what happens when companies choose
to give up their mission for profit, control, and dominance.
We can all learn something from Facebook, and not just about our world, but about ourselves,
too. How do you use Facebook? How do you feel when you use it? Does Facebook provide the
information, connection, and value you would hope for out of a social media network?
2017 has revealed where things haven�t been in alignment in many areas of society and
our lives. 2018 will continue that trend, but will also contain a great deal of new
adoption and change. No longer will we be able to simply sit back; action will be on
the menu, and this is why I see Facebook getting hit so hard in 2018. The truth is coming out,
and I feel Facebook will be forced to shift the way it operates back to something that
provides true and deeper value to humanity, or it will begin to shed its user base heavily.
We�re all feeling the shift.
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