Could Facebook Go the Way of MySpace?

October 18, 2010

The Wall Street Journal has caught Facebook in flagrante again This time, WSJ reports, in a front-page expose that the most popular applications, or “apps,” on world’s No. 1 social-networking site  have been selling users’ information—including access to people’s names and, in some cases, their friends’ names—to dozens of advertising and Internet tracking companies.

The abuse affects tens of millions of Facebook users – including those who set their profiles to the strictest privacy settings.

ALL of the 10 most popular apps that Facebook’s 500m users play or use to share common interests have been selling user’s information to outside companies. Three of these companies, including Farmville with 59m users, have also been selling personal information about a user’s friends, which means whether you personally used these games or applications becomes irrelevant – if you have a friend who played, your information was likely grabbed and sold as well.

Though the practice of reselling consumer information breaches Facebook’s rules, policy enforcement is clearly lacking when it is the Wall Street Journal, not internal proactive monitoring, that discovers the abuse of consumer information. Confronted with the WSJ expose, a Facebook spokesman said on Sunday that “it is taking steps to “dramatically limit” the exposure of users’ personal information.”  But that comes well after the horse left the barn. To understand just how rapidly that information is sold and resold, see the screenshot taken from a WSJ article at the bottom of this blog.

This expose comes on top of a law suit over Facebook’s own now-discontinued practice of sending users’ data to advertisers without users’ knowledge – a case also brought to light by the WSJ last May. Facebook had been sending Facebook ID codes to advertisers under some circumstances when users clicked on an ad. The codes could then be used by the advertisers to look up individual profiles, which could include a person’s real name, age, hometown, or other details. Facebook has since discontinued the practice.

Attention, Facebook execs: remember MySpace! It used to be considered unstoppable, but as soon as the company became synonymous with sexual predators and scams, the vast majority of users left the site – and what’s left? A shadow.

Consumers, know your strength. Online Companies don’t make money primarily by selling advertising — they make money selling access to YOU, and information about YOU, to advertisers. You and your information are top commodities in the online world.

Think about it: other than its servers and code, what is Facebook’s value? It’s the 500m users they have to attract advertisers and advertising dollars. If Facebook’s users left the site, what would Facebook have left? Just a bunch of servers and code.

The lesson is that if you don’t like the way you’re treated, and you choose en masse to migrate, internet empires topple.

Consumers hold the ultimate power in a model that makes you the commodity, but you don’t yet know it, or how you can wield that power.

How can the Internet become more responsible regarding consumer privacy? Three things that haven’t happened need to happen:

  1. Consumers need to understand how and why their information is being used – and when it is being exploited. Until  prominent disclosure of each company’s policy regarding user information is mandatory, the question of what is being disclosed will run underneath the collective consumer consciousness.
  2. A watchdog organization needs to be established, to which consumers can turn to see how various companies treat their data, their privacy and their safety. The WSJ article series lays a strong foundation for this, but it’s a one-off effort, not the sustained oversight needed. The Safe Internet Alliance has proposed taking on, or helping to create, this role, but it is still far from accomplishing that goal or getting stakeholder buy-in. In the absence of self-regulatory or a consumer watch organization, this role will need to fall to a government body like the FTC.
  3. Consumers need to find a way to collaborate better. It’s a united we stand, divided we fall scenario where any one user doesn’t make a difference to a company wielding 500m users; but 5 million organized users – or 100m users – demanding change can make even the largest company quail. I’m confident that at least 100m users would stand together in outrage over what’s happened to their data, and the data of their friends. They just need a rallying point.

I am not opposed to online advertising — it’s what funds our ‘free’ use of internet services. What does concern me is knowing which companies are tracking me and how they are doing so, understanding the privacy elements that are in place to protect me, and being able to opt out if I choose to do so.

We consumers played a role in the creation of this ad-driven internet model. The dot.com bubble burst of 2000 happened because internet companies built their content and services assuming we would subscribe to use their services and thereby make their companies profitable. But we didn’t want to pay for subscriptions —  we wanted everything to be free. Somehow we forgot that free doesn’t pay the bills, let alone turn a profit.

We forced internet companies to either go bankrupt, or find a new revenue model that would extract money from those willing to pay, and that happened to be the advertisers. What internet companies quickly learned was that the more targeted ads could be, the more advertisers were willing to pay them for access to their users.

It doesn’t take a leap to understand how we’ve come to a place were you and your data are commodities, and where the environment makes ‘shoplifting’ your data (taking it without your knowledge or permission) very enticing.

Which brings us back to the start of this story:  how Facebook’s top applications providers have taken up the practice of stealth exploitation of your data; how Facebook’s previously indulged in stealth exploitation of your data; how your your Facebook privacy settings have changed time after time under your feet (leaving your data information exposed); and how thousands of other websites follow the same practices. Not to mention the dozens of data aggregator and advertising sites who snap up your data knowing full well you did not give your permission for it to be sold or bought.

To learn more, see my blog posts Know Which Companies Track You For Behavioral Advertising?, and Ad Stalking – When Ads Follow You Online, and the WSJ series What They Know that outlines how companies track and share your information. I recommend you search the WSJ list to look at the behavior of any sites you use.

Already this morning I’ve received a flurry of calls and emails from consumers asking what they should do. My advice? Stop using these applications, demand your information be removed from their sites, then let Facebook,  your Attorney General and the FTC know of your outrage.

Since contacting Facebook can be difficult to accomplish, here is the phone number to Facebook’s customer service: 650-543-4800  and Fax: 650-543-4801

Click here to find your Attorney General and how to contact them

Click here to file a complaint with the FTC.

Linda


45% of US Mobile Internet Users Will Use Social Networks By 2013

November 17, 2009

607.5 million mobile internet users world wide are expected to access social networks from their devices by 2013 according to a new report “Mobile Social networks: Marketing by Location Shows Potential“ from eMarketer. In the US, that percentage is expected to be slightly higher (45%) and represent 56.2 million individuals.

Top Social Networks = Top Mobile Social Networks

Not surprisingly, the report found that the top destinations for mobile social networkers are the same for computer users – underscoring the fact that there is no online-vs.-offline, computer-vs.-mobile distinctions, we have one world with multiple means of communication based on what is most convenient at the time.

The top-10 mobile social networks list:

  1. Facebook
  2. MySpace
  3. YouTube
  4. Twitter
  5. Yahoo
  6. MSN/Windows Live/Bing
  7. Flickr
  8. LinkedIn
  9. Blogger
  10. MocoSpace

What this means to consumers

While many online companies are very careful of your privacy, security and safety, we simply cannot assume the industry as a whole will act ethically.

With greater urgency than ever before, consumers need to define the rules of online engagement with companies, and services. We are late in demanding adequate consumer protections in social media applications, and we need fix this or we will utterly lose our right to privacy, and to control our information, forever.

Recent events show just how appallingly careless and/or exploitive major companies within the industry continue to be. Social gaming companies base their revenue models on scamming consumers. Mega-corporations wait months to notify consumers of data breaches. Social networks only step up to issue safety tips after a death occurs. Data aggregators exploit and sell personal information. And the tawdry list goes on.

Follow the money

Companies are in the business of making money and minimizing costs and there is big money in the mobile social media market. MediaBuyerPlanner expects overall mobile advertising to generate $416 million in US ad spending this year, and to grow 27% globally to $2.1 billion in 2010.

When revenue goals trample consumers’ rights there needs to be a loud and painful outcry. You have the right to safety, privacy and security when using products in what we quaintly refer to as the ‘physical world’. These rights must be extended across our full world – online-and-offline, computer-and-mobile.

There needs to be oversight to ensure that privacy, transparency, data minimization or compartmentalization, security, integrity, accountability, and terms of use have all been measured to keep consumers best interests at the forefront of product design and delivery.

Act now

You have a vital role to play. As consumers you can—and should—vote with your feet if the experience you’re having on a service doesn’t meet your expectations. You can – and should – let your elected officials know when corporate exploitation is occurring online.

You can make a difference. Your safety rights won’t be established in Internet programs and services overnight. But if you let companies and elected officials know what you think, they will surely be delivered faster.

Linda


Economic Divide? Affluent Internet Users More Likely to Use Facebook, Lower Income Users on MySpace

October 21, 2009

Americans using social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace or LinkedIn are generally more  affluent and urban than the average American. Yet when Nielsen Claritas overlaid a panel of over 200,000 participants with their 66 demographic and behavioral segmentation scheme, they found some significant differences in user’s social networking service preferences based on their economic status.

  • Facebook users have a largely upscale profile. The top third of lifestyle segments relative to affluence were 25% more likely to use Facebook than those in the those in the lower third.
  • The bottom third segments related to affluence are 37% more likely to use MySpace than those in the top third
  • Users of Facebook were also much more likely to use LinkedIn, a network geared towards business and professional networking, than those who use MySpace

The research also found that bloggers and tweeters aren’t necessarily more affluent, but they do live in more urban areas such as New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago. Penetration rates of the top two most visited blogging platforms, Blogger and WordPress, and Twitter show that Nielsen’s 12 Urban lifestyle segments are more likely to blog and tweet than their 22 Town & Rural segments.

Linda


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