bwo one of the Sourcelists or Bytes4all with thanks


original: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/jan/14/facebook

With friends like these ...

Facebook has 59 million users - and 2 million new ones join each
week. But you won't catch Tom Hodgkinson volunteering his personal
information - not now that he knows the politics of the people behind
the social networking site

Tom Hodgkinson

(This article appeared in the Guardian on Monday January 14 2008 on p6
of the G2 comment & features section. It was last updated at 15:17 on
January 18 2008.)

----------------------------------------------------------------------
-

The following correction was printed in the Guardian's Corrections and
clarifications column, Wednesday January 16 2008

The US intelligence community's enthusiasm for hi-tech innovation
after 9/11 and the creation of In-Q-Tel, its venture capital fund, in
1999 were anachronistically linked in the article below. Since 9/11
happened in 2001 it could not have led to the setting up of In-Q-Tel
two years earlier.

(My comment: No not directly of course, but not a damnable error
either. The author's anachronic but not illogical sequencing
reconfirms that 9/11 was merely a threshold date for developments that
had been afoot for much longer - begin nineties, if not earlier - PR)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
---


The Independent Guide to Facebook

I despise Facebook. This enormously successful American business
describes itself as "a social utility that connects you with the
people around you". But hang on. Why on God's earth would I need
a computer to connect with the people around me? Why should my
relationships be mediated through the imagination of a bunch of
supergeeks in California? What was wrong with the pub?

And does Facebook really connect people? Doesn't it rather disconnect
us, since instead of doing something enjoyable such as talking and
eating and dancing and drinking with my friends, I am merely sending
them little ungrammatical notes and amusing photos in cyberspace,
while chained to my desk? A friend of mine recently told me that he
had spent a Saturday night at home alone on Facebook, drinking at his
desk. What a gloomy image. Far from connecting us, Facebook actually
isolates us at our workstations.

Facebook appeals to a kind of vanity and self-importance in us, too.
If I put up a flattering picture of myself with a list of my favourite
things, I can construct an artificial representation of who I am
in order to get sex or approval. ("I like Facebook," said another
friend. "I got a shag out of it.") It also encourages a disturbing
competitivness around friendship: it seems that with friends today,
quality counts for nothing and quantity is king. The more friends
you have, the better you are. You are "popular", in the sense much
loved in American high schools. Witness the cover line on Dennis
Publishing's new Facebook magazine: "How To Double Your Friends List."

It seems, though, that I am very much alone in my hostility. At the
time of writing Facebook claims 59 million active users, including 7
million in the UK, Facebook's third-biggest customer after the US and
Canada. That's 59 million suckers, all of whom have volunteered their
ID card information and consumer preferences to an American business
they know nothing about. Right now, 2 million new people join each
week. At the present rate of growth, Facebook will have more than
200 million active users by this time next year. And I would predict
that, if anything, its rate of growth will accelerate over the coming
months. As its spokesman Chris Hughes says: "It's embedded itself to
an extent where it's hard to get rid of."

All of the above would have been enough to make me reject Facebook for
ever. But there are more reasons to hate it. Many more.

Facebook screen grab

Facebook is a well-funded project, and the people behind the funding,
a group of Silicon Valley venture capitalists, have a clearly thought
out ideology that they are hoping to spread around the world.
Facebook is one manifestation of this ideology. Like PayPal before
it, it is a social experiment, an expression of a particular kind of
neoconservative libertarianism. On Facebook, you can be free to be who
you want to be, as long as you don't mind being bombarded by adverts
for the world's biggest brands. As with PayPal, national boundaries
are a thing of the past.

Although the project was initially conceived by media cover star Mark
Zuckerberg, the real face behind Facebook is the 40-year-old Silicon
Valley venture capitalist and futurist philosopher Peter Thiel.
There are only three board members on Facebook, and they are Thiel,
Zuckerberg and a third investor called Jim Breyer from a venture
capital firm called Accel Partners (more on him later). Thiel invested
$500,000 in Facebook when Harvard students Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes
and Dustin Moskowitz went to meet him in San Francisco in June 2004,
soon after they had launched the site. Thiel now reportedly owns 7%
of Facebook, which, at Facebook's current valuation of $15bn, would
be worth more than $1bn. There is much debate on who exactly were the
original co-founders of Facebook, but whoever they were, Zuckerberg is
the only one left on the board, although Hughes and Moskowitz still
work for the company.

Thiel is widely regarded in Silicon Valley and in the US venture
capital scene as a libertarian genius. He is the co-founder and CEO
of the virtual banking system PayPal, which he sold to Ebay for
$1.5bn, taking $55m for himself. He also runs a ?3bn hedge fund
called Clarium Capital Management and a venture capital fund called
Founders Fund. Bloomberg Markets magazine recently called him "one of
the most successful hedge fund managers in the country". He has made
money by betting on rising oil prices and by correctly predicting
that the dollar would weaken. He and his absurdly wealthy Silicon
Valley mates have recently been labelled "The PayPal Mafia" by Fortune
magazine, whose reporter also observed that Thiel has a uniformed
butler and a $500,000 McLaren supercar. Thiel is also a chess master
and intensely competitive. He has been known to sweep the chessmen off
the table in a fury when losing. And he does not apologise for this
hyper-competitveness, saying: "Show me a good loser and I'll show you
a loser."

Facebook

But Thiel is more than just a clever and avaricious capitalist. He is
a futurist philosopher and neocon activist. A philosophy graduate from
Stanford, in 1998 he co-wrote a book called The Diversity Myth, which
is a detailed attack on liberalism and the multiculturalist ideology
that dominated Stanford. He claimed that the "multiculture" led to a
lessening of individual freedoms. While a student at Stanford, Thiel
founded a rightwing journal, still up and running, called The Stanford
Review - motto: Fiat Lux ("Let there be light"). Thiel is a member of
TheVanguard.Org, an internet-based neoconservative pressure group that
was set up to attack MoveOn.org, a liberal pressure group that works
on the web. Thiel calls himself "way libertarian".

TheVanguard is run by one Rod D Martin, a philosopher-capitalist whom
Thiel greatly admires. On the site, Thiel says: "Rod is one of our
nation's leading minds in the creation of new and needed ideas for
public policy. He possesses a more complete understanding of America
than most executives have of their own businesses."

This little taster from their website will give you an idea of their
vision for the world: "TheVanguard.Org is an online community of
Americans who believe in conservative values, the free market and
limited government as the best means to bring hope and ever-increasing
opportunity to everyone, especially the poorest among us." Their aim
is to promote policies that will "reshape America and the globe".
TheVanguard describes its politics as "Reaganite/Thatcherite". The
chairman's message says: "Today we'll teach MoveOn [the liberal
website], Hillary and the leftwing media some lessons they never
imagined."

So, Thiel's politics are not in doubt. What about his philosophy? I
listened to a podcast of an address Thiel gave about his ideas for
the future. His philosophy, briefly, is this: since the 17th century,
certain enlightened thinkers have been taking the world away from the
old-fashioned nature-bound life, and here he quotes Thomas Hobbes'
famous characterisation of life as "nasty, brutish and short", and
towards a new virtual world where we have conquered nature. Value now
exists in imaginary things. Thiel says that PayPal was motivated by
this belief: that you can find value not in real manufactured objects,
but in the relations between human beings. PayPal was a way of moving
money around the world with no restriction. Bloomberg Markets puts it
like this: "For Thiel, PayPal was all about freedom: it would enable
people to skirt currency controls and move money around the globe."

Clearly, Facebook is another uber-capitalist experiment: can you
make money out of friendship? Can you create communities free of
national boundaries - and then sell Coca-Cola to them? Facebook is
profoundly uncreative. It makes nothing at all. It simply mediates in
relationships that were happening anyway.

Coca-Cola Photo: Tim Boyle/Getty

Thiel's philosophical mentor is one Ren? Girard of Stanford
University, proponent of a theory of human behaviour called mimetic
desire. Girard reckons that people are essentially sheep-like and
will copy one another without much reflection. The theory would also
seem to be proved correct in the case of Thiel's virtual worlds: the
desired object is irrelevant; all you need to know is that human
beings will tend to move in flocks. Hence financial bubbles. Hence
the enormous popularity of Facebook. Girard is a regular at Thiel's
intellectual soirees. What you don't hear about in Thiel's philosophy,
by the way, are old-fashioned real-world concepts such as art, beauty,
love, pleasure and truth.

The internet is immensely appealing to neocons such as Thiel because
it promises a certain sort of freedom in human relations and in
business, freedom from pesky national laws, national boundaries
and suchlike. The internet opens up a world of free trade and
laissez-faire expansion. Thiel also seems to approve of offshore tax
havens, and claims that 40% of the world's wealth resides in places
such as Vanuatu, the Cayman Islands, Monaco and Barbados. I think
it's fair to say that Thiel, like Rupert Murdoch, is against tax.
He also likes the globalisation of digital culture because it makes
the banking overlords hard to attack: "You can't have a workers'
revolution to take over a bank if the bank is in Vanuatu," he says.

If life in the past was nasty, brutish and short, then in the future
Thiel wants to make it much longer, and to this end he has also
invested in a firm that is exploring life-extension technologies. He
has pledged ?3.5m to a Cambridge-based gerontologist called Aubrey
de Grey, who is searching for the key to immortality. Thiel is
also on the board of advisers of something called the Singularity
Institute for Artificial Intelligence. >From its fantastical website,
the following: "The Singularity is the technological creation of
smarter-than-human intelligence. There are several technologies
... heading in this direction ... Artificial Intelligence ...
direct brain-computer interfaces ... genetic engineering ...
different technologies which, if they reached a threshold level of
sophistication, would enable the creation of smarter-than-human
intelligence."

So by his own admission, Thiel is trying to destroy the real world,
which he also calls "nature", and install a virtual world in its
place, and it is in this context that we must view the rise of
Facebook. Facebook is a deliberate experiment in global manipulation,
and Thiel is a bright young thing in the neoconservative pantheon,
with a penchant for far-out techno-utopian fantasies. Not someone I
want to help get any richer.

The third board member of Facebook is Jim Breyer. He is a partner in
the venture capital firm Accel Partners, who put $12.7m into Facebook
in April 2005. On the board of such US giants as Wal-Mart and Marvel
Entertainment, he is also a former chairman of the National Venture
Capital Association (NVCA). Now these are the people who are really
making things happen in America, because they invest in the new young
talent, the Zuckerbergs and the like. Facebook's most recent round
of funding was led by a company called Greylock Venture Capital,
who put in the sum of $27.5m. One of Greylock's senior partners is
called Howard Cox, another former chairman of the NVCA, who is also
on the board of In-Q-Tel. What's In-Q-Tel? Well, believe it or not
(and check out their website), this is the venture-capital wing of
the CIA. After 9/11, the US intelligence community became so excited
by the possibilities of new technology and the innovations being made
in the private sector, that in 1999 they set up their own venture
capital fund, In-Q-Tel, which "identifies and partners with companies
developing cutting-edge technologies to help deliver these solutions
to the Central Intelligence Agency and the broader US Intelligence
Community (IC) to further their missions".

The US defence department and the CIA love technology because it makes
spying easier. "We need to find new ways to deter new adversaries,"
defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in 2003. "We need to make the
leap into the information age, which is the critical foundation of
our transformation efforts." In-Q-Tel's first chairman was Gilman
Louie, who served on the board of the NVCA with Breyer. Another key
figure in the In-Q-Tel team is Anita K Jones, former director of
defence research and engineering for the US department of defence,
and - with Breyer - board member of BBN Technologies. When she
left the US department of defence, Senator Chuck Robb paid her the
following tribute: "She brought the technology and operational
military communities together to design detailed plans to sustain US
dominance on the battlefield into the next century."

Stars and stripes

Now even if you don't buy the idea that Facebook is some kind of
extension of the American imperialist programme crossed with a massive
information-gathering tool, there is no way of denying that as a
business, it is pure mega-genius. Some net nerds have suggsted that
its $15bn valuation is excessive, but I would argue that if anything
that is too modest. Its scale really is dizzying, and the potential
for growth is virtually limitless. "We want everyone to be able
to use Facebook," says the impersonal voice of Big Brother on the
website. I'll bet they do. It is Facebook's enormous potential that
led Microsoft to buy 1.6% for $240m. A recent rumour says that Asian
investor Lee Ka-Shing, said to be the ninth richest man in the world,
has bought 0.4% of Facebook for $60m.

The creators of the site need do very little bar fiddle with the
programme. In the main, they simply sit back and watch as millions of
Facebook addicts voluntarily upload their ID details, photographs and
lists of their favourite consumer objects. Once in receipt of this
vast database of human beings, Facebook then simply has to sell the
information back to advertisers, or, as Zuckerberg puts it in a recent
blog post, "to try to help people share information with their friends
about things they do on the web". And indeed, this is precisely what's
happening. On November 6 last year, Facebook announced that 12 global
brands had climbed on board. They included Coca-Cola, Blockbuster,
Verizon, Sony Pictures and Cond? Nast. All trained in marketing
bullshit of the highest order, their representatives made excited
comments along the following lines:

"With Facebook Ads, our brands can become a part of the way users
communicate and interact on Facebook," said Carol Kruse, vice
president, global interactive marketing, the Coca-Cola Company.

"We view this as an innovative way to cultivate relationships
with millions of Facebook users by enabling them to interact with
Blockbuster in convenient, relevant and entertaining ways," said
Jim Keyes, Blockbuster chairman and CEO. "This is beyond creating
advertising impressions. This is about Blockbuster participating in
the community of the consumer so that, in return, consumers feel
motivated to share the benefits of our brand with their friends."

"Share" is Facebookspeak for "advertise". Sign up to Facebook and
you become a free walking, talking advert for Blockbuster or Coke,
extolling the virtues of these brands to your friends. We are seeing
the commodification of human relationships, the extraction of
capitalistic value from friendships.

Now, by comparision with Facebook, newspapers, for example, begin
to look hopelessly outdated as a business model. A newspaper sells
advertising space to businesses looking to sell stuff to their
readers. But the system is far less sophisticated than Facebook for
two reasons. One is that newspapers have to put up with the irksome
expense of paying journalists to provide the content. Facebook
gets its content for free. The other is that Facebook can target
advertising with far greater precision than a newspaper. Admit on
Facebook that your favourite film is This Is Spinal Tap, and when a
Spinal Tap-esque movie comes out, you can be sure that they'll be
sending ads your way.

Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook Facebook founder Mark Zuckerman
(Photo: Paul Sakuma/AP)

It's true that Facebook recently got into hot water with its Beacon
advertising programme. Users were notified that one of their friends
had made a purchase at certain online shops; 46,000 users felt that
this level of advertising was intrusive, and signed a petition
called "Facebook! Stop invading my privacy!" to say so. Zuckerberg
apologised on his company blog. He has written that they have now
changed the system from "opt-out" to "opt-in". But I suspect that
this little rebellion about being so ruthlessly commodified will soon
be forgotten: after all, there was a national outcry by the civil
liberties movement when the idea of a police force was mooted in the
UK in the mid 19th century.

Futhermore, have you Facebook users ever actually read the privacy
policy? It tells you that you don't have much privacy. Facebook
pretends to be about freedom, but isn't it really more like an
ideologically motivated virtual totalitarian regime with a population
that will very soon exceed the UK's? Thiel and the rest have created
their own country, a country of consumers.

Now, you may, like Thiel and the other new masters of the cyberverse,
find this social experiment tremendously exciting. Here at last is
the Enlightenment state longed for since the Puritans of the 17th
century sailed away to North America, a world where everyone is free
to express themselves as they please, according to who is watching.
National boundaries are a thing of the past and everyone cavorts
together in freewheeling virtual space. Nature has been conquered
through man's boundless ingenuity. Yes, and you may decide to send
genius investor Thiel all your money, and certainly you'll be waiting
impatiently for the public flotation of the unstoppable Facebook.

Or you might reflect that you don't really want to be part of this
heavily-funded programme to create an arid global virtual republic,
where your own self and your relationships with your friends are
converted into commodites on sale to giant global brands. You may
decide that you don't want to be part of this takeover bid for the
world.

For my own part, I am going to retreat from the whole thing, remain
as unplugged as possible, and spend the time I save by not going on
Facebook doing something useful, such as reading books. Why would I
want to waste my time on Facebook when I still haven't read Keats'
Endymion? And when there are seeds to be sown in my own back yard? I
don't want to retreat from nature, I want to reconnect with it. Damn
air-conditioning! And if I want to connect with the people around me,
I will revert to an old piece of technology. It's free, it's easy and
it delivers a uniquely individual experience in sharing information:
it's called talking. Facebook's privacy policy

Just for fun, try substituting the words 'Big Brother' whenever you
read the word 'Facebook'

1 We will advertise at you

"When you use Facebook, you may set up your personal profile, form
relationships, send messages, perform searches and queries, form
groups, set up events, add applications, and transmit information
through various channels. We collect this information so that we can
provide you the service and offer personalised features."

2 You can't delete anything

"When you update information, we usually keep a backup copy of the
prior version for a reasonable period of time to enable reversion to
the prior version of that information."

3 Anyone can glance at your intimate confessions

"... we cannot and do not guarantee that user content you post on
the site will not be viewed by unauthorised persons. We are not
responsible for circumvention of any privacy settings or security
measures contained on the site. You understand and acknowledge that,
even after removal, copies of user content may remain viewable in
cached and archived pages or if other users have copied or stored your
user content."

4 Our marketing profile of you will be unbeatable

"Facebook may also collect information about you from other sources,
such as newspapers, blogs, instant messaging services, and other users
of the Facebook service through the operation of the service (eg,
photo tags) in order to provide you with more useful information and a
more personalised experience."

5 Opting out doesn't mean opting out

"Facebook reserves the right to send you notices about your account
even if you opt out of all voluntary email notifications."

6 The CIA may look at the stuff when they feel like it

"By using Facebook, you are consenting to have your personal data
transferred to and processed in the United States ... We may be
required to disclose user information pursuant to lawful requests,
such as subpoenas or court orders, or in compliance with applicable
laws. We do not reveal information until we have a good faith belief
that an information request by law enforcement or private litigants
meets applicable legal standards. Additionally, we may share account
or other information when we believe it is necessary to comply with
law, to protect our interests or property, to prevent fraud or other
illegal activity perpetrated through the Facebook service or using
the Facebook name, or to prevent imminent bodily harm. This may
include sharing information with other companies, lawyers, agents or
government agencies."

END





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