I’ve mostly skipped v1 on Facebook, Twitter, etc.  Maybe v2 will be more 
appealing.

 

From: radicalcentrism@googlegroups.com <radicalcentrism@googlegroups.com> On 
Behalf Of Centroids
Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 2020 11:23 AM
To: Centroids Discussions <RadicalCentrism@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [RC] Optimism for Social Networking 2.0

 

A surprisingly compelling case for “fragmented” identity graphs:

This has been the case for me: I am in private groups with plenty of folks that 
I disagree with about a whole host of things, but because we share a common 
interest, and are ok being trusted friends on that vector, I have learned a lot 
about why they believe what they believe about a bunch of issues. I think it 
helps my analysis, and I think it makes me a better citizen. That certainly 
isn’t our expectation of social media today, but that is because we are stuck 
on v1.

Social Networking 2.0
https://stratechery.com/2020/social-networking-2-0/
(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

  _____  

It’s a rather motley crew. One is a nurse, another a lawyer, a third an 
investment adviser. There are three programmers, a soldier, and a data 
scientist. An entrepreneur, a consultant, and, I just found out today, a 
nuclear engineer. The ring leaders are a hotel clerk and a person we have known 
for years, yet no one knows his name, and then there is me.

We talk about all kinds of things: video games and COVID, family frustrations 
and bad bosses, and whether Aaron Rodgers is better than Patrick Mahomes (if 
only Rodgers had had Andy Reid). And, of course, the Milwaukee Bucks. That’s 
the reason we are in the same group, after all, which is another way of noting 
that all of us — except the Kansas City Chiefs fan — are originally from 
Wisconsin. And yet many of us had never met each other until a couple of years 
ago, when we attended a Bucks game together; the physical world was a trailing 
indicator.


Home on the Internet


While my Twitter bio has changed over the years, the last sentence has, as far 
as I can remember, stayed the same:

 <https://twitter.com/benthompson> 

The proximate cause for that sentence was the fact I lived in Asia, even as my 
Twitter-personae was firmly rooted in the United States, whether that be 
because of my longstanding interest in technology, or enthusiastic support of 
Wisconsin sports teams. And yet, when I moved back to the United States, my 
interest and relationship to Taiwan remained, and Twitter specifically and the 
Internet broadly were a way to stay connected; the bio still fit.

For a time that bio described Twitter as well: for a particular type of person, 
someone who thrived on information — the more the better! — Twitter was a place 
to not simply learn but to find people like yourself. That is how the 
“Fiefdom”, the name the aforementioned motley crew gave ourselves, found each 
other. We all loved the Bucks — or, perhaps more accurately, loved to complain 
about the Bucks — but while Twitter helped us find each other, over the past 
few years the medium has grown too noisy, performative, and combative to be a 
place to simply hang out; we have a group DM, which, frankly, sucks, but at 
least it is our own place.

That’s not my only online community: while the writing of Stratechery is a solo 
affair, building new features like the Daily Update Podcast 
<https://stratechery.com/2020/the-daily-update-podcast/>  or simply dealing 
with ongoing administrative affairs requires a team that is scattered around 
the world; we hang out in Slack. Another group of tech enthusiast friends is in 
another Slack, and a third, primarily folks from Silicon Valley, is in 
WhatsApp. Meanwhile, I have friends and family centered in Wisconsin (we use 
iMessage), and, of course Taiwan (LINE for family, WhatsApp for friends). The 
end result is something I am proud of:

  <https://stratechery.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/socialv2-3-1024x651.png> 

The pride arises from a piece of advice I received when I announced I was 
moving back to Taiwan seven years ago: a mentor was worried about how I would 
find the support and friendship everyone needs if I were living halfway around 
the world; he told me that while it wouldn’t be ideal, perhaps I could piece 
together friendships in different spaces as a way to make do. In fact, not only 
have I managed to do exactly that, I firmly believe the outcome is a superior 
one, and reason for optimism in a tech landscape sorely in need of it.


Social Networking 1.0


Earlier this year in The TikTok War 
<https://stratechery.com/2020/the-tiktok-war/>  I explained why the first 
version of products on the Internet were usually a bit of a dud:

It is always tricky to look at the analog world if you are trying to understand 
the digital one. When it comes to designing products, a pattern you see 
repeatedly is copying what came before, poorly, and only later creating 
something native to the medium.

Consider text: given that newspapers monetized by placing advertisements next 
to news stories, the first websites tried to monetize by — you guessed it — 
placing advertisements next to news stories. This worked, but not particularly 
well; publishers talked about print dollars and digital dimes, and later mobile 
pennies. Sure, the Internet drew attention, but it just didn’t monetize well.

What changed was the feed, something uniquely enabled by digital. Whereas a 
newspaper had to be defined up-front, such that it could be printed and 
distributed at scale, a feed is tailored to the individual in real-time — and 
so are the advertisements. Suddenly it was print that was worth pennies, while 
the Internet generally and mobile especially were worth more than newspapers 
ever were. 

The most famous feed in technology is the Facebook feed 
<https://stratechery.com/2013/mobile-makes-facebook-just-an-app-thats-great-news/>
 , which through its algorithmic magic made the lives of your friends and 
family seem far more tantalizing than they probably were in reality. The result 
was a social network that the FTC, in a lawsuit filed last week 
<https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/documents/cases/1910134fbcomplaint.pdf> , 
claimed was a monopoly:

Facebook holds monopoly power in the market for personal social networking 
services (“personal social networking” or “personal social networking 
services”) in the United States, which it enjoys primarily through its control 
of the largest and most profitable social network in the world, known 
internally at Facebook as “Facebook Blue,” and to much of the world simply as 
“Facebook.” 

The FTC focused on “friends and family”:

As Facebook has long recognized, its personal social networking monopoly is 
protected by high barriers to entry, including strong network effects. In 
particular, because a personal social network is generally more valuable to a 
user when more of that user’s friends and family are already members, a new 
entrant faces significant difficulties in attracting a sufficient user base to 
compete with Facebook. 

I certainly felt this way previously; in 2016 I wrote in How Facebook Squashed 
Twitter <https://stratechery.com/2016/how-facebook-squashed-twitter/> :

Facebook always had an inherent advantage over Twitter in that its network, at 
least in the beginning, was based on networks that already existed in the 
offline world, namely, people you already knew. That made the service 
immediately approachable and useful for basically everyone. Twitter, on the 
other hand, was more about following people you didn’t know based on your 
interests. This theoretically applied to everyone as well, but uncovering those 
interests and building an appropriate list of people to follow had to be done 
from scratch. 

I increasingly wonder, though, how much of my previous Facebook analysis was 
wrong not because I misunderstood Facebook, but because I overestimated 
Twitter. I noted last week while writing about the FTC’s lawsuit in the Daily 
Update 
<https://stratechery.com/2020/facebook-sued-by-ftc-and-states-the-ftcs-case-antitrust-and-politics/>
 :

I would prefer a world where the [Instagram] deal didn’t happen. As I have 
noted 
<https://stratechery.com/2017/why-facebook-shouldnt-be-allowed-to-buy-tbh/>  I 
believe that absent a deal there would be more competition in the advertising 
space, and more consumer-focused startups.

At the same time, I do have serious rule-of-law reservations about undoing a 
deal eight years on, particularly given the fact that it appears that the 
advertising-supported space is doing better than I thought a few years ago: 
Snapchat in particular is building a great business, LinkedIn is doing much 
better, and TikTok is obviously on its way. Honestly, I wonder to what extent 
Twitter’s endemic poor management made the advertising space seem worse than it 
actually was? 

I would go further: Twitter’s incompetence didn’t simply make Facebook’s 
advertising business look more dominant than it should have; it led all of us — 
including the FTC — to miss the point that friends and family was Social 
Networking 1.0: something imported from the analog world that, as time goes on, 
will be viewed as inferior to the far richer universe that is Social Networking 
2.0.


Twitter Incompetence and Identities


Go back to the Fiefdom that I started with, and the terrible experience that 
are Twitter group direct messages. It’s impossible to keep your place, so if 
you follow a link or answer another message, you are dropped to the bottom of 
the thread. Of course there is no searching, and no third-party API so that 
someone else could do a better job. The thread also frequently fails to update 
in real-time, meaning you sometimes reply to questions that have already been 
answered, which is unfortunate because there is no way to respond to individual 
messages. It’s honestly awful.

And yet, we use it anyway, because that is where our friendship group formed 
around our shared interest in the Bucks, and it is the interest graph where 
Twitter has always had the potential to differentiate itself; in 2015, when it 
was already clear that the company had missed its opportunity to be great, I 
wrote in Twitter and What Might Have Been 
<https://stratechery.com/2015/twitter-might/> :

What makes Twitter the company valuable is not Twitter the app or 140 
characters or @names or anything else having to do with the product: rather, 
it’s the interest graph that is nearly priceless. More specifically, it is 
Twitter identities and the understanding that can be gleaned from how those 
identities are used and how they interact that matters. 

Identities — plural — referred to the many users of Twitter, but a second thing 
that is interesting about my Twitter group is that @benthompson 
<https://twitter.com/benthompson>  is not a member; my alter-ego, @notechben 
<https://twitter.com/NoTechBen>  is. I created that account — which, I will 
tell you right now, is pretty annoying to follow — so that I could tweet freely 
during basketball games without losing followers from my primary Twitter 
account. After all, just because you like my takes on tech, it does not 
necessarily follow that you like my takes on sports.

What I increasingly realize, though, is that separating my identities on 
Twitter does not mean a lesser experience, but a far superior one; social 
interaction in any medium is always a balance between self-expression and the 
accommodation of others, which means that in the analog world it is a constant 
struggle to strike a balance between being myself and annoying everyone around 
me at some point or another. The magic of the Internet, though, is that you can 
be whatever you want to be:

 <https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13627120> Image from The New 
Yorker cartoon by Peter Steiner, 1993 

There are clear downsides to this property of the Internet, particularly on 
public forums like Twitter, where trolls can attack anyone, bots can astroturf 
any subject, and even nation-states can seek to incite civil unrest. That’s the 
thing, though: public broadcast mediums are Social Networking 1.0 as well.


>From v1 to v2


Remember that the key characteristic of v1 digital products is that they simply 
copy what already exists offline. For Facebook that meant digitizing 
connections between friends and family, and for Twitter it meant broadcasting 
conversations as if you were sitting at a bar. Such literal translations, 
though, have limits: Facebook soon found it necessary to augment content from 
friends and family with professionally produced content from publishers, while 
public Twitter conversation has disappeared in the face of performative 
putdowns and political proclamations. The problem is that digital makes analog 
goods worse: a lot of what your friends and family believe is boring or 
objectionable, and conversations constrained by the geography of a bar simply 
don’t translate to a worldwide audience.

What truly makes a category is v2: products that are only possible because of 
the unique properties of digital. That, for example, is why TikTok is such a 
threat to Facebook’s hold on attention; again from The TikTok War:

While it is easy for users to create text updates, and, with the rise of 
smartphones, even easier to create pictures, producing video is difficult. 
Until recently, phone cameras were even worse at video than they were photos, 
but more importantly, compelling video takes some degree of planning and skill. 
The chances of your typical Facebook user having a network full of accomplished 
videographers is slim, and remember, when it comes to showing user-generated 
content, Facebook is constrained by who your friends are…

ByteDance’s 2016 launch of Douyin — the Chinese version of TikTok — revealed 
another, even more important benefit to relying purely on the algorithm: by 
expanding the library of available video from those made by your network to any 
video made by anyone on the service, Douyin/TikTok leverages the sheer scale of 
user-generated content to generate far more compelling content than 
professionals could ever generate, and relies on its algorithms to ensure that 
users are only seeing the cream of the crop. 

TikTok’s “network”, such that it is, is the entire world, which means its 
content is better than Facebook’s could ever be, which means it is a far better 
attention sink than Facebook could ever be.

Meanwhile, on the other extreme, public broadcasting by default — whether that 
broadcasting be to the entire world, as on Twitter, or to all of your friends 
and family, as on Facebook — actually constrains your ability to communicate, 
because you run into the conflict I described earlier: your “whole self”, 
versus others’ only somewhat overlapping interests.

This is where messaging is a much more natural fit, and, as far as the depth of 
your network is concerned, messaging services are just as much a threat to v1 
social networks connectivity as TikTok is to Facebook’s hold on attention: I 
can simultaneously be a Bucks fan with the Fiefdom, a tech enthusiast with my 
Slack group, explore ideas with my WhatsApp group, and talk politics with my 
trusted friends. The fact that I am not my whole self in any of these groups is 
a feature, not a bug, and one that is uniquely made possible by digital.


Social Media Optimism


Facebook, despite its immense success, has been far more attuned to the 
inadequacies of its social networking model than Twitter has, and has been 
pushing aggressively to adapt its products to a v2 world. That includes its 
shift to emphasizing Groups in 2017, and its focus on messaging, including the 
spin-out of Messenger, the acquisition of WhatsApp, and its attempts to unify 
the messaging experience across its platforms.

Even that, though, suggests that the company can’t entirely escape its roots: 
having one identity is a core principle for Facebook, which is great for 
advertising if nothing else, but at odds with the desire of many to be 
different parts of themselves to different people in different contexts. 
Twitter, meanwhile, is unlikely to ever recover from its missed opportunity to 
dominate the interest graph.

Instead, the role for both products will be as a bridge between 
attention-focused products on one side, and private interest-defined trusted 
groups on the other.

  <https://stratechery.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/socialv2-4-1024x767.png> 

Their networks still have value, but primarily as a tool for distribution and 
reach of content that will increasingly be created in one place, and discussed 
in another.1 <> 

This, needless to say, doesn’t seem like much of a monopoly, certainly not one 
worth reaching back in time to retroactively change the rules of the game. What 
is encouraging, though, is that this view also gives hope for the seemingly 
hopeless climate that has been fostered by v1 social networks. The problem with 
forcing everyone to be their “whole selves” for the world, whether they want to 
or not, is that it becomes strikingly difficult to find common ground. After 
all, there is always something about everyone that is annoying or off-putting.

On the flipside, to the extent that v2 social networking allows people to be 
themselves in all the different ways they wish to be, the more likely it is 
they become close to people who see other parts of the world in ways that 
differ from their own. Critically, though, unlike Facebook or Twitter, that 
exposure happens in an environment of trust that encourages understanding, not 
posturing.

This has been the case for me: I am in private groups with plenty of folks that 
I disagree with about a whole host of things, but because we share a common 
interest, and are ok being trusted friends on that vector, I have learned a lot 
about why they believe what they believe about a bunch of issues. I think it 
helps my analysis, and I think it makes me a better citizen. That certainly 
isn’t our expectation of social media today, but that is because we are stuck 
on v1.


Related


1.      Instagram and Snapchat, in my estimation, are fully self-contained 
networks that encapsulate content generation, distribution, and discussion; 
they are the integrated version of this model []

  _____  

 

Sent from my iPhone

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