Facebook is Dead and Buried

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Bribie G

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Latest polling / research indicates that Facebook is basically dead man walking, now just for oldies, kids don't use it any more except to keep in touch with Aunty.

Well, I've never been subscribed to Facebook so obviously didn't miss much. Maybe I should join to keep in touch with the Croquet Club events or the Walking Frame Mini Marathon support crew.

Edit: The article says that Parents have "worked out how to use Facebook" and find the system to their liking. I reckon this misses the point, with Facebook now 10 years old, most of those Uni aged original users now ARE the parents, so FB is probably going to travel with that, as well as a slightly older, cohort. A bit like AOL, Geocities, and other blasts from the past into whose mighty company FB is now marching.

</Endeth>
 
Marketing types I think refer to this as the "Levi's Phenomenon" Where by kids think stuff is cool until their parents get into it. Then it stops being cool really quickly.
 
Bribie G said:
Whatever happened to MySpace?
MySpace? That's soooo 2011 Bribie,get with the times bro :D Seriously though,personally I'd be wrapt if Fb closed tomorrow.It's a mega corp with absolutely no concern for it's users.The site is filled with pedos and deviates of the highest order and Fb does bugga all about it despite massive public pressure.They only act when an advertiser complains about something,$$$$$ talks with Fb,not any sort of decency or morals. Despite what the report says,with over 1 billion users,Fb isn't going away too soon,unfortunately.
 
There must be a fair few kids still using it if you watch the news. Any out of control party that you see on the news is invariably caused by Facebook.
 
An out of control Tupperware party spilled out onto the footpath as 40 year old women wrestled in the gutter, setting fire to neighbour's cars and hurling abuse and salad spinners at paramedics. Apparently one of the participants had advertised the party on Facebook and it escalated from there. Police removed several thousand items of pastel coloured plastic from the scene.....
 
Thats nothing compared to the Avon riot of 2007. Or even the Amway stampede of 1997.
 
Over the weekend, there was some scary news for the world's biggest social network. Facebook, the story went, was "dead and buried", teenagers were turning away "in their droves", put off by their parents' presence on the network.
It was "the start of what looks likely to be a sustained decline". The headlines appeared first in the UK, then spread rapidly around the world. But I was sceptical.
I've seen plenty such stories over the years - I wrote my own first piece asking whether Facebook was in decline around Christmas 2007 - and each time the social network has just kept on growing.
But this story emerged not from some dodgy survey promoted by a marketing company or even from a journalist whipping something up in the quiet days between Christmas and New Year. It came from "comprehensive European research", something called the Global Social Media Impact Study.
This EU-funded project, headed by Professor Daniel Miller from University College London, looks like a serious piece of work. Its website tells us that its aim is to study how social media are changing our lives and involves "eight highly trained ethnographic researchers based at UCL... each spending 15 months during 2013-4, in small towns in Brazil, China (2), India, Italy, Trinidad, Turkey and the UK".


“Start Quote

[Teenagers] have gone off to cooler places like Snapchat, Instagram and WhatsApp, he tells us, because they are embarrassed to hang out on a network now frequented by their parents”


There is some interesting material on the project's blog - the researchers have found that 40% of Italians have never changed their Facebook privacy settings - but nothing immediately apparent about the social network's demise among young people.
So, was this a case of journalists taking an academic research paper and overhyping it? No - the man who sold, perhaps oversold, the story turns out to be Professor Miller, leader of the GSMI study. All of the quotes in the opening paragraph of this blogpost came from a piece he wrote on a website called The Conversation, whose catchline is "academic rigour, journalistic flair."
The piece makes it clear that he has drawn his conclusions not from the study as a whole but from its work in the UK. "What we've learned from working with 16-18 year olds in the UK is that Facebook is not just on the slide, it is basically dead and buried." They have gone off to cooler places like Snapchat, Instagram and WhatsApp, he tells us, because they are embarrassed to hang out on a network now frequented by their parents.
What the piece does not make clear is how this research has been conducted, how many teenagers were involved, where they were and how they were selected. Professor Miller is hard to contact right now - his Twitter account (@dannyanth) tells us he's "at work/rest in remote site in Caribbean with intermittent/poor internet access. Back end January."
But he has used Twitter to answer some questions about his research. He says it involves school kids in villages north of London from three schools with a population of more than 2,000, and "the data is ethnographic/qualitative but I strongly encourage people to interview schoolkids to find confirmation," he said.
Now it is obviously true that rival networks and apps are increasingly popular amongst teenagers, and it may also be the case that some of them are leaving Facebook for good.
But do interviews with some 16 to 18 year olds in one small area really tell us that young people are leaving Facebook "in their droves" and herald a "sustained decline"?
That seems quite a stretch - the plural of anecdote is not data, as the man said. And there is plenty of data out there about Facebook - notably from the company itself which now has to update investors regularly about its users. The company's chief financial officer David Ebersman caused a tremor in the share price in October when he indicated that there had been a slight fall in daily activity on Facebook among teenagers.
The shares quickly recovered and have now scaled new heights - but surely when trading begins in New York on Monday afternoon traders will rush to sell in response to the "dead and buried" story?
Or perhaps they will decide that Professor Miller's theories show more journalistic flair than academic rigour.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-25547755
 
Bridges said:
Marketing types I think refer to this as the "Levi's Phenomenon" Where by kids think stuff is cool until their parents get into it. Then it stops being cool really quickly.
Look at what has happened to the Billabong brand in recent years...the surfgear, not the icecreams.
 
This is a perfect article to get other social network sites up and running. I don't see it being a big deal in Australia though.
 
Yeah. Snapchat. Because todays kids attention spans weren't short enough already.
 
Snapchat isn't really social networking though, it's a way for people who aren't aware that smartphones can take screenshots to limit how long the recipient can see a given pic.
 
I think Twitter has usurped some of the conversational elements of FB. It's a much less restricted, more fluid format and seems to facilitate more immediate interaction between lay-users and companies. I don't really see the appeal for companies with snapchat as interactions are private and fleeting.

On a personal note, I'd have ditched FB ages ago, but it does offer a way to preserve the ability to stay in touch with people (even if I choose not to use it). I predict FB will still be around in a few years, just less frequently interacted with.
 
I just dont get twitter...good for shameless self promotion...really only good for "look at me" types.

I really couldnt give a shit if "insert celebraty" is have a late' or whatever they do.
 
No offense Stu, but as you said, you don't get Twitter. Don't get me wrong, there's plenty of shameless self promotion going on, but there's a great deal more to it. It played a crucial role in the Arab Spring and is influential on a far less grand scale. One aspect of it that I have noticed is the way it has changed the face if our media. It provides a platform for people who previously had none and holds some of our mainstream commentators to account - if you're not convinced, consider that twitter stoushes/events are news stories in their own right at the moment.
 
I'm enjoying the apparent exodus of the twitterati from Facebook. It's calmer. I get fewer candy crush saga and hulk game requests. There are fewer jewel thief and FarmVille intrusions. It's like it's becoming usable!
 

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