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Well, not "few people". In fact, 90% of the world is not on facebook. As the world population creeps closer to 7 billion, Facebook is losing US and UK members before they've even reached 700 million.I'm one of the few people in the entire world that isn't on Facebook. I tried, but found that I don't understand it.
It would be good to know a bit more behind that drop, like if there are certain age groups that are deleting their accounts. I'd suspect the older crowd would delete it but with middle-schoolers, high-schoolers and college students? Not so much.
I think it is the exact opposite. As more of the older crowd joins, the middle/high school and college kids are bowing out so that their parents/relatives aren't following their every move. At least that's what I have seen lately. That, and the 20-somethings that would rather delete their account entirely than remove tons of individual posts/pictures for their new job.
I've never heard of that happening personally. A few of them perhaps would leave but such a staggering amount of kids leaving because of parents? That seems to be a real stretch. Only about 20% of 13-17 yr olds have a Facebook account according to the Facebook demographics (a few million). Facebook isn't as set in with the middle and high-schoolers because it's a far more tight nit community of people that you see very often. Even when I was in high school and a lot of people had MySpaces, I didn't have any use for it because I already saw everyone 5 days a week. If history is bound to repeat itself, when they turn 18 and go off to college, they will get one to keep in touch with friends because it's much easier than emailing or texting/calling.
Google? Privacy? Hold on a sec while I LMAO for a few minutes. That's like saying you hate Microsoft because Bill Gates is evil, that's why you use Apple products. Steve Jobs makes Gates look like an Angel. Same deal with Google over FaceBook IMHO.If Diaspora becomes sufficiently robust, we'll just be waiting for a tipping point, and it'll be curtains for facebook. Of course, it might not happen.
If Google were to get its head out of its a$$, they could build and open source model, similar to Android, that could decentralize social networking and make privacy more of a right than a privilege in the digital society.
I remember when Facebook required the college email address too. When the games started popping up, I got worried it was about to become the next Myspace.
Facebook is a dilemma....its still has that plain, clean look that I liked when it was new. It added some features that made me dump Myspace with the quickness. Facebook beats Twitter IMO because its easier to follow along with what someone's posting and their replies to ppl.
Google+ seems to be a real challenge to Facebook tho. I heard that Facebook has Groups and might be similar, but the Circles thing with Google+ is nice. If Google+ can make it where you can really have specific folks see specific things and vice versa and make it easy to do...it could be a hit and have Facebook looking over its shoulders..
It will stay for many years to come. It has essentially "conquered" any other social networking site like it (ex. MySpace). Facebook is so mainstream now that it'll be very difficult for it to die away... like Twitter. There is also more room for it to grow in other countries where Facebook is still competing with native social networking sites.
I remember when Facebook used to be more of a "college thing" and that once you graduated from college, you moved up from MySpace to Facebook. That has definitely changed and more and more people are getting Facebook at far younger ages. When you grow up with Facebook... it's very difficult to stop using it, especially when all your friends are using it.
We believe that Social Networking needs to take a completely different approach. All of the newest companies are following the path of it's predecessor's, and it's predecessor's, but they are not diverging from that path. We have.
Okay is that a general statement of your project, or is that a not-so-subtle plug that you're on the Google+ development team? If it's the latter, where's my invite?
You took the words right out of my mouth. To me, Facebook died when my family and relatives started friending me. As best I can remember, I am currently friends with 8 different family members with one more constantly annoying me to friend them. Facebook is a much better place when your parents are not the first people to comment on or like your statuses.It failed for me the day my 89 year old grandmother added me as a friend. Trying to use facebook for social purposes becomes alot harder when your entire extended family reads it.
The problems with MySpace were all the bots, hacking, link spoofs, and five billion surveys from one person in the last ten minutes. Also the complete saturation of drama queen 12 year olds, teenagers who think they can do whatever they want with no consequences, and 40 year olds who think they're still 18.
All those things are beginning to come into Facebook. Especially the emergence of idiots after they allowed the general public access to it. In all honesty, the college e-mail requirement kept a lot of those morons out.