On Facebook
What I'm about to write will seem remarkably obvious to many but incredidly strange to others. Furthermore, I beleive that those who will find it obvious will still find it strange that it took so long for me to write it.
I closed my Facebook account.
I've never been a Facebook heavy user; I opened an account just to see what it was all about without looking to get in touch with anyone. For a time, it was all good, not terribly useful but peacefully pleasant, just like a barren snow field. Then I started to have Facebook "friends".
One big problem is the low barrier of entry to send a friend request. On Facebook, you get friend requests from people who could not care less about you and whom we've not talked to for more then a decade, from people whom you've only exchanged a glance with. On retrospect, the best thing to do is to ignore those, but that won't solve the root of the problem.
Most people suck at Facebook. It's not that they have bad intensions or that they are dumb -- I've seen incredibly smart persons suck at Facebook -- it's that Facebook rewards annoying behaviors. I won't say much about games, because it should be obvious to anyone that there is no way in hell that I should find it interesting that you've established and imaginary drug cartel on some imaginary island in the middle of an imaginary nowhere. If you think otherwise, imagine me calling you every time I solve the Rubik's Cube.
And then there's the status update. In the best case, it's used to broadcast irrelevant trivia about someone's life, which is annoying but not particularly harmful. But it does not stop there because the status update is a poweful tool to reach instantly a broad audience, and that's the root of the problem. As soon as someone in a particular network starts to use the status update to promote stuff, where stuff can be anything, and not necessarily stuff for sale, others see that opportunity and the wave goes on. From there, the noisy TV turns into a blinking billboard.
I decided that it was too much for me when I realized that I was doing the same. When you reach that point, it's clear that whatever benefit there is to Facebook certainly cannot outweight the damage that it does to you.
Comments
Félicitation! De mon côté ça fait à peu près un an que j'ai désactivé mon compte Facebook. Maintenant j'utilise Twitter. Mais même Twitter devient une perte de temps pour moi donc j'ai commencé à le pointer vers 127.0.0.1 dans mon fichier hosts (pour être sûr de ne plus y retourner à moins de manuellement éditer mon hosts file, chose que je fais rarement).
J'ai fais la même chose pour Facebook (entrée dans /etc/hosts) pendant deux semaines. Apès confirmation que c'était vraiment mieux pour mon morale, j'ai officialisé ma résolution.
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Facebook is just YAAP (Yet Another Advertising Platform).
Note: You did not close your account, you unfortunately only deactivated it.
It's scheduled for deletion; you have to go through a 14 days deactivation period before the account is deleted.
You will re-connect before those 14 days because of social ads addiction.