Save Google -- Let Facebook Die

https://lauren.vortex.com/2018/11/22/save-google-let-facebook-die


Do you know why Facebook is called Facebook? The name dates back to
founder Mark Zuckerberg's "FaceMash" project at Harvard, designed to
display photos of students' faces (without their explicit permissions)
to be compared in terms of physical attractiveness. Essentially, a way
he and his friends could avoid dating "ugly" people by his definition.
Zuck even toyed with the idea of comparing those student photos with
shots of farm animals.

Immature. Exploitative. Verging on pre-echos of evils to come.

Fast forward to Facebook of today. As we've watched Zuckerberg's baby
expand over the years like a mutant virus from science fiction, we've
had plenty of warnings that the at best amoral attitudes of Zuck and
his hand-picked cronies have permeated the Facebook ecosystem.

It's long been a given that Facebook ruthlessly controls, limits, and
manipulates the data that users are shown -- to its own financial
advantage.

But long before we learned of Facebook's deep embeds in right-wing
politics, and the Russians' own deep manipulative embeds in Facebook,
there were other clues that Facebook's ethical compass was virtually
nonexistent.

Remember when it was discovered that Facebook was manipulating
information shown to specific sets of users to see if their emotional
states could be altered by such machinations without their knowledge?

Over and over again, Facebook has been caught in misstatements, in
subterfuge, in outright lies -- including the recent revelations of
their paying an outside PR hit firm to fabricate attack pieces on
other firms to divert attention from Facebook's own spreading
problems, even to the extent of the firm reportedly spreading false
antisemitic conspiracy theories.

Zuck and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg found an outgoing
employee to fall on his sword to take official responsibility for
this, and initially both Zuck and Sheryl publicly disclaimed any
knowledge of that outside firm's actions. But now Sheryl has
apparently reversed herself, admitting that information about the firm
did reach her desk. And do you really believe that control freaks like
Mark Zuckerberg and Sandberg weren't being kept informed about this in
some manner all along? C'mon!

Facebook of course is not the only large Internet firm with ethical
challenges. Recently in "The Death of Google"
( https://lauren.vortex.com/2018/10/08/the-death-of-google ), I noted
Google's own ethical failings of late, and my suggestions for making
Google a better Google. Importantly, that post was not predicting
Google's demise, but rather was proposing means to help Google avoid
drifting further from the admirable principles of its founding
(organizing and making available the world's information -- in sharp
contrast to Facebook's "avoid dating ugly people" design goal).  So
that post about Google was in the manner of Dickens' "Ghost of
Christmas Future" -- a discussion of bad outcomes that might be, not
that must be.

Saving Google is a righteous and worthy goal.

Not so Facebook. Facebook's business model is and has always been
fundamentally rotten to its core, and the more that this core has been
exposed to the public, the more foul the stench of rotten decay that
Facebook emits.

"Saving" Facebook would mean helping to perpetuate the sordid,
manipulative mess of Facebook today, that reaches back to its very
beginnings -- a creation that no longer deserves to exist.

In theory, Facebook could change its ways in positive directions, but
not without abandoning virtually everything that has characterized
Facebook since its earliest days.

And there is no indication -- zero, none, nil -- that Zuckerberg has
any intention of letting that happen to his self-made monster.

So in the final analysis -- from an ethical standpoint at least --
there is no point to trying to "save" Facebook -- not from regulators,
not from politicians, and certainly not from itself.

The likely end of Facebook as we know it today will not come tomorrow,
or next month, or even perhaps over a short span of years.

But the die has been cast, and nothing short of a miracle will save
Facebook in the long run. And whether or not you believe in miracles,
Facebook doesn't deserve one.

--Lauren--
Lauren Weinstein (lau...@vortex.com): https://www.vortex.com/lauren 
Lauren's Blog: https://lauren.vortex.com
Google Issues Mailing List: https://vortex.com/google-issues
Founder: Network Neutrality Squad: https://www.nnsquad.org 
         PRIVACY Forum: https://www.vortex.com/privacy-info
Co-Founder: People For Internet Responsibility: https://www.pfir.org/pfir-info
Member: ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy
Google+: https://google.com/+LaurenWeinstein
Twitter: https://twitter.com/laurenweinstein
Tel: +1 (818) 225-2800
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