10 other possibilities for social networks:
Maybe they already exist in some form --
 
Faithbook A growing religion, or a way to help a religion  grow
Purplebook Independent voters
Greenbook  Environmentalists, gardeners, foresters,  etc
Marsbook  people interested in planet Mars
Sexbook  discuss sexual problems, sexually related  psychological issues
-sort of a democratized "Ann Landers" 
XPBook  -for XP users who want to keep their systems  running
Sketchbook artists who want to trade art tips,  show-and-tell their art, etc
 
Schoolbook A network for home schoolers

Spacebook sci-fi writers,  creative cartographers,  etc, who design planets
Futurebook  people who forecast the future
 
BR
 
 
PS
Two sure bets:
(1) At least one, and probably several of these ideas will, in fact, take  
off 
in the next year or two, and
(2) No-one here will be interested.
 
============================
 
 
 
 
Real Clear Politics
Real  Clear Technology  
 
Is Facebook The Last Great Social  Network?
 
Facebook spent the last decade as the Internet's largest, most  dominant 
social network. But it might be the last of its  kind.
 Author: _Selena Larson_ (http://readwrite.com/author/selena-larson)  
Publish date: February  04, 2014

 
 
(http://readwrite.com/2014/02/04/facebook-10-anniversary-last-great-social-network#disqus_anchor)
 
Ten years and billions of wall posts and  embarrassing selfies later, Tue
sday marks a full decade of Facebook's existence  on the Web. From a Harvard 
dorm room project to a social network with more than  a billion registered 
users, Facebook has evolved to help people connect with  their friends around 
the world—despite its fair share of missteps and  controversies.
As we look back at how Facebook changed our lives—it has, whether or not we 
 want to admit it—we must consider the massive scale to which it grew. And, 
by  doing so, Facebook changed the social nature of the online landscape in 
ways  even founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg couldn't anticipate. 
“It’s awesome that there’s this utility and community at our school, and 
one  day someone will build this for the world,” Zuckerberg said at the Open 
Commute  Summit last week while describing a conversation with his friend in 
the early  days of Facebook. “It didn’t occur to me it could be us.” 
Facebook can lay claim to almost every personal aspect of its users'  lives—
from helping high school friends stay connected to documenting every  
literal step of our babies' lives, to even being our one-stop social login for  
other apps and websites. Facebook is now such a part of the social fabric 
that  it’s unlikely we'll ever see another all-encompassing, dominant social  
service quite like Facebook.  
What Facebook has built will be its legacy: The last big social network. 
>From Social Network To Social Identity
Before Facebook arrived in 2004, the Internet wasn't an easy place to 
connect  with the people around you. Sure, you and your friends could exchange 
email  addresses or AIM/MySpace usernames, but both of those early social 
platforms  were littered with strangers and spambots with no good solution for 
either  problem. There wasn't a website where users could create their own 
social  profiles, connect with others, but most importantly, feel safe enough 
to use  their own names—to literally be themselves. 
Facebook changed all that. By starting off as an exclusive platform for  
Harvard students that slowly opened up to more colleges (and eventually high  
schoolers) over time, Facebook offered a relatively safe, easy-to-use online 
 platform for users and their friends to keep in touch, share their 
thoughts and  photographs with each other, and, yes, even use their government  
names.  
The  term “social network” is thrown around a lot to describe any site 
that connects  people on the Internet. Twitter is a social network. LinkedIn is 
a social  network. But Facebook is the original  social network—the one 
website that brought together everything we wanted in an  online space, and 
made “social network” as synonymous to Facebook as “search” is  to Google. 
Most social networks are specialized in some way: Twitter is great for  
posting status updates; Foursquare is perfecting check-ins; Instagram, now  
Facebook-owned, is the most popular place for sharing and consuming photos.  
Pinterest and Tumblr are _advancing the visual web_ 
(http://readwrite.com/2013/12/18/visual-web-2013-trends) , and messaging 
services like  Snapchat are 
overtaking the personal messaging landscape. But there’s still  nowhere quite 
like Facebook for connecting with friends, where so often we find  
ourselves scrolling through updates from friends we wouldn’t otherwise be in  
touch 
with.  
A _recent Pew Internet study_ 
(http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/02/03/6-new-facts-about-facebook/)  
found that  many users approach Facebook 
to share with a lot of people at once. It's  true—there are very few online 
platforms that can boast hundreds of people you  know personally all in the 
same place. And even though Facebook has found  itself in hot water countless 
times over the last decade for putting profits  before privacy (e.g. 
_Facebook Beacon_ (http://readwrite.com/2007/12/05/facebook_beacon_apology)  in 
2007,_ sponsored stories_ 
(http://readwrite.com/2013/08/29/facebook-privacy-policy-facial-recognition)  
last year),  users continue to voluntarily offer 
up their data to Facebook—after all, where  else on the Web can you 
conveniently find all your friends in one  place?  
Since Facebook is still the most popular platform where people use their 
real  names, Facebook login is becoming one of the most popular forms of 
_controlling and maintaining our online  identities_ 
(http://readwrite.com/2013/11/19/facebook-integration-everywhere) . The company 
is beginning to 
integrate with everything, meaning  we need a Facebook account to use services 
like 
Lyft or Amazon Wish Lists. Soon,  logging in with one's Facebook account 
could become the mainstream way to  identify oneself online.   
Do We Even Need A Social Network Anymore?
 

As the company pushes for more fragmentation, Facebook as we know it—a  
timeline of status updates, photos, news, and advertisements—is  changing.  
Facebook has provided its fair share of online offerings over the years—a  
messaging service, a photo-sharing service, and even a news service. Now, 
even  though Facebook still offers its main site and mobile apps, many of 
those  individual services have spun off to become successful standalone 
applications.  Facebook offers Instagram and Facebook Camera for photos, 
Facebook  
Messenger for chatting with friends, _and now Paper_ 
(http://readwrite.com/2014/02/03/facebook-paper-splashes-new-coat-paint-news-feed)
  for reading 
news stories  from Facebook and around the Web. These apps are a testament to 
how many  people rely on Facebook in some capacity to connect with each 
other.  
Facebook executives _told Bloomberg Businessweek_ 
(http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-01-30/facebook-turns-10-the-mark-zuckerberg-interview#p3)
  
the  company's recent efforts, including Paper, are tailored for smaller 
audiences,  and won’t see a billion users anytime soon. In fact, a Facebook  
spokesperson told ReadWrite the company will measure each platform's success  
based on how much—not how many—people enjoy sharing and consuming stories 
on the  application.  
As Facebook continues to evolve, so do its users and their habits. Facebook 
 started as a glorified address book, but now we want Facebook to help make 
the  rest of our online lives simpler. But Facebook isn’t what many of us 
signed  up for years ago. It has since transitioned into a platform for 
developers,  advertisers and businesses, which encroaches on the initial 
concept 
of simply  being a place for friends to connect. 
Ten More Years
In 2004, we needed Facebook. In 2014, we don’t need another one. 
Google knows firsthand just how much people want, or rather don’t want,  
another social network. Google+, the company’s attempt to create an online  
identity to rival Facebook, has largely failed, in part because people are 
happy  to stay on Facebook (but also because it’s pushing features that 
_alienate more users than they attract_ 
(http://readwrite.com/2014/01/10/google-plus-inescapable) ). 
As for Facebook, it's likely we'll see the largest social network splinter  
even further as the platform continues to evolve. It's not because users don
’t  like Facebook as an online identity manager, but rather because the 
world is  becoming more digitally literate and we need more specialized apps 
and resources  to reflect our specific needs and interests. A full-service 
social network isn’t  needed anymore; a variety of apps are.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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