Facebook's Gone Rogue; It's Time for an Open Alternative [telecom]

Facebook's Gone Rogue; It's Time for an Open Alternative

By Ryan Singel May 7, 2010

Facebook has gone rogue, drunk on founder Mark Zuckerberg's dreams of world domination. It's time the rest of the web ecosystem recognizes this and works to replace it with something open and distributed.

Facebook used to be a place to share photos and thoughts with friends and family and maybe play a few stupid games that let you pretend you were a mafia don or a homesteader. It became a very useful way to connect with your friends, long-lost friends and family members. Even if you didn't really want to keep up with them.

Soon everybody - including your uncle Louie and that guy you hated from your last job - had a profile.

And Facebook realized it owned the network.

Then Facebook decided to turn "your" profile page into your identity online - figuring, rightly, that there's money and power in being the place where people define themselves. But to do that, the folks at Facebook had to make sure that the information you give it was public.

So in December, with the help of newly hired Beltway privacy experts, it reneged on its privacy promises and made much of your profile information public by default. That includes the city that you live in, your name, your photo, the names of your friends and the causes you've signed onto.

This spring Facebook took that even further. All the items you list as things you like must become public and linked to public profile pages. If you don't want them linked and made public, then you don't get them - though Facebook nicely hangs onto them in its database in order to let advertisers target you.

This includes your music preferences, employment information, reading preferences, schools, etc. All the things that make up your profile. They all must be public - and linked to public pages for each of those bits of info - or you don't get them at all. That's hardly a choice, and the whole system is maddeningly complex.

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***** Moderator's Note *****

ObTelecom: What if Google voice follows a similar path?

Bill Horne Moderator

Reply to
Monty Solomon
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C'mon, won't it be great that (in that future just around the corner) when someone calls you on your u-beaut network interface device (which used to be called a "phone") that the complete life history of the person calling you will be able to be searched and displayed in front of you in a fraction of a second?

You will able to decide if you want to communicate with this person based on things down to the colour of the toilet paper they buy - because that must be available in some linked database somewhere!

Of course they will only contact you because they have also done similar research on your life.......

-- Regards, David.

David Clayton Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Knowledge is a measure of how many answers you have, intelligence is a measure of how many questions you have.

Reply to
David Clayton

Was illustrated in video some time back. See

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"Ordering Pizza in the Future".

Reply to
Ron

That's why my wife pays with cash at the grocery store. ;-)

***** Moderator's Note *****

That may not be an option in the future: a supermarket in my area has found the information they gain from "Loyalty cards" so valuable that I can get a discount of 20 cents per gallon at some gas stations by letting them scan my supermarket card.

Reply to
Sam Spade

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