Posts Tagged: facebook


8
Apr 09

Facebook Confirms 200 Million Active User Mark

via Inside Facebook:

Just seven months after hitting the 100 million user mark last August and 90 days after hitting the 150 million mark in January, Facebook confirmed today that the site has just crossed another major milestone: 200 million active users.

On average, Facebook has added nearly half a million users per day, every day, since late August. If Facebook were a country, it would now have the 5th largest population in the world (about 70% of Facebook users are outside the United States).

Quite an accomplishment – congrats to Facebook!


6
Apr 09

NY Mag asks “Does Facebook Own You?”

New York Magazine leads with an interesting piece on data ownership and online social networks by Vanessa Grigoriadis.  I’ve got a quote in there, which builds on some writing I did last month.

This is part of who I am now—somebody who knows that her nursery-school tormentor wasn’t a bully without a heart. It will get logged into my profile, and that profile will become part of the “social graph,” which is a map of every known human relationship in the universe. Filling it in is Facebook’s big vision, a typically modest one for Silicon Valley. It’s too complex for a computer scientist to build. Just as our free calls to GOOG-411 helped Google build its voice-recognition technology, we are creating the graph for Facebook, and I’m not sure that we can take ourselves out once we’ve put ourselves on there. We have changed the nature of the graph by our very presence, which facilitates connections between our disparate groups of friends, who now know each other. “If you leave Facebook, you can remove data objects, like photographs, but it’s a complete impossibility that you can control all of your data,” says Fred Stutzman, a teaching fellow studying social networks at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “Facebook can’t promise it, and no one can promise it. You can’t remove yourself from the site because the site has, essentially, been shaped by you.”

Check the full article.


3
Apr 09

CIO Magazine on privacy in social networks

C.G. Lynch of CIO magazine examines the business implications of the shifting nature of privacy in social networks.  He draws on research that Jacob Kramer-Duffield and I ran last fall:

But it turns out some users have fiddled with those privacy settings, after all. In research conducted by the UNC School of Information and Library Science this past fall, more than 70 percent of 495 college students surveyed claimed to have altered their Facebook privacy settings in some way. Around half of the students also said they limited access to their profile to “friends only.”

The research also indicates that their attention to privacy controls increases with their time on the service. During their first six months on Facebook, only 40 percent of students said they modified their privacy settings. After one year, that number jumped to nearly 80 percent.

It is a great article – I’ve spoken with Chris a few times and he’s an astute analyst of social networks.  The article has good quotes from Chris Kelly, Facebook’s smart Chief Privacy Officer.

As I mentioned in a post last week, Jacob and I are currrently writing this study up for publication.  We presented initial results at the ASIST Annual Meeting, but we hope to get this into journal form so we can share the results more broadly.


29
Mar 09

Porter on Relationship Asymmetry in Facebook

Joshua Porter has a lengthy piece predicting relationship asymmetry in Facebook.  Joshua writes:

I predict Facebook will soon go fully asymmetric, allowing all users of the system (not just celebrities or companies) to have “follower” relationships that don’t require reciprocation. I believe they will once again follow in Twitter’s footsteps and people will be able to have follower lists that are much bigger than the number of people they follow.

I don’t know how they’ll do this, my guess is they’ll attempt to keep both systems intact. They’ll keep the friends designation for symmetric relationships, but also add another asymmetric capability. It would probably be best to use the term “follow” for this, but they may continue to keep the term “fan”, even though being a fan of another individual sounds a bit silly…the term “follower” is better.

Facebook will announce this publicly in their common way, by saying their goal is to help you connect to your friends and family better. They’ll say they’ve realized that there are many relationships that aren’t as strong as mutual friends but are nonetheless important…and therefore they’ve hit upon this wonderful new functionality for you…and they’ll somehow recast it as “Open” in some way…and blah blah blah. Pundits will point out how they’re copying Twitter. Robert Scoble will say it’s brilliant and remind us Zuck just doesn’t care what people think. Users will revolt by creating a “Facebook Users Against Fan Designation” group and it will quickly grow to 1 million members. The actual design of the system will hardly come up. Ev Williams will probably tweet something completely unrelated. You know. The usual.

The real reasons why Facebook will go asymmetric are reach (growth) and data.

Facebook will grow their service by allowing people to accrue attention in a way they can’t currently in the system. People will realize the same benefits they currently do on Twitter…you can actually start to have an audience that is larger than your current friends list. In other words, this will allow members of Facebook to have a much larger reach than they could before…thus giving Facebook a larger reach as well. This will be the next big growth spurt for Facebook, who has executed so well on almost everything they’ve done so far…but at the present moment the structure of the system prevents this from happening.

In short, Facebook will improve the ability of its members to accrue social capital within the system. And, if you aren’t familiar with this notion, check out Yochai Benkler’s The Wealth of Networks, which lays out in excellent detail why social capital is the wealth of networks. He also describes the way humans have trouble with exchanging social capital with economic capital. (this exchange is the nut Facebook and other social networks are trying to crack)

Well worth a read over at Bokardo.


26
Mar 09

Facebook Family Groups: A Smart Move

Via AllFacebook.com:

Facebook appears to have it out for the developers of large family applications on Facebook. The company has created a new landing page where users can create groups specifically targeted to their family. While there is nothing unique about the end product, what is unique is the way in which Facebook is promoting the creation of new groups that are private only to family members.

According to Facebook, the Family Groups are a place to “Share stories, photos and videos with your loved ones privately and securely.”  AllFacebook’s analysis is simplistic – I think this move is a major move for Facebook that will drive adoption and content creation.

The problem that Facebook faces is simple – users are often reluctant to connect across generations.  While it is OK for cousins to connect, parents or children often feel conflicted about friending.  Without getting into the intricacies of this interaction, it is clear that Facebook is missing a lot of latent value with awkward family connections.  A child may not want to grant a parent access to their everyday goings on, but it is quite likely that the child will want to see pictures from family events, read notes about family members, or find out about events from relatives.

In theory, family groups will serve as a bridge between family members, creating a space where content can be shared securely without requiring friend connections.  This is a big deal, and I think it can surface a lot of value for Facebook.  Particulary, I think it will encourage more content creation and sharing (digitzing old pictures, uploading new ones from family events), and it will give late adopters a final push to join.  These late adopters will be able to see content from people they care about without having to do the awkward dance of Facebook friendship (which can come later when norms are established and understood).

For this to work, Facebook needs to treat the family group as special, affording it a prominent and sensible space in the interface.  If you have to click through three levels of hoops to share with your Family group, it will be a miserable failure.  Facebook needs to build this product to answer the needs of late adopters who have been incentivized by family content – otherwise these users may be frustrated.

If executed properly, this is a very smart move for Facebook.


10
Mar 09

Facebook Team on Maintained Relationships

Cameron Marlow and the Facebook Data Team shed some more light on the Facebook network maintenance findings reported in the Economist (read danah boyd’s take):

We were asked a simple question: is Facebook increasing the size of people’s personal networks? This is a particularly difficult question to answer, so as a first attempt we looked into the types of relationships people do maintain, and the relative size of these groups. The image above presents a high-level overview of our findings: while the average Facebook user communicates with a small subset of their entire friend network, they maintain relationships with a group two times the size of this core. This not only affects each user, but also has systemic effects that may explain why things spread so quickly on Facebook.

The post has great visuals, including the following:

network-comparison

This graphic explores the communication behavior of an individual with a network of n size.  An average person with 500 friends maintains mutual Facebook communication with 10 (if male) or 16 (if female) individuals.  There’s very limited generalizability in this data (we mediate our relationships through a number of heterogenous technologies), I see a striking parallel to some previous research.  Employing similar system-level data, Ling and Yttri (2006) explored the communication patterns of mobile phone users.  Someone age 20-24 may keep 105 names in their registry, but they call only 22 of them monthly, 7 weekly, and 3 daily.  The technology mediates access, but it doesn’t change the norm.

ling

The larger point Marlow makes regards one-way communication, i.e those you surveil through the news feed or profile views.  This behavior is pre-digital, but social networks afford us surveillance unlike any technology prior.  If our cell phones dailed people at random and suggested we chat with them, we wouldn’t think of that as a feature.  The multiplexity of a social network’s communication space allows just that functionality, with lower social cost.  The social impacts of this affordance are valid area for study, but to get answers we’ll have to move past large-scale data and into subjective methods.

Of course, any time we posit large social change as a result of technology, our expectations often fall short of reality.  Just as the telegraph didn’t end war, Facebook isn’t going to reinvent friendship (lower-case f).  The lack of a grandiose main effect doesn’t take away from the importance, and I look forward to the work the Facebook Data Team does exploring this interesting area.

Ling, R. and Yttri, B.  (2006).  Control, Emancipation and Status: The Mobile Telephone in the Teen’s Parental and Peer Group Control Relationships. In Kruat, R., Brynin, M., and Kiesler, S. (Eds.), Computers, Phones and the Internet: Domesticating Information Technology. New York: Oxford University Press.


9
Mar 09

NY Times Botches SNS Privacy

Via Michael Zimmer, an embarrasing NY Times story from Randall Stross on privacy in social networks.  Stross writes:

As the scope of sharing personal information expands from a few friends to many sundry individuals grouped together under the Facebook label of “friends,” disclosure becomes the norm and privacy becomes a quaint anachronism.

Facebook’s younger members — high school or college students, and recent graduates who came of age as Facebook got its start on campuses — appear comfortable with sharing just about anything. It’s the older members — those who could join only after it opened membership in 2006 to workplace networks, then to anyone — who are adjusting to a new value system that prizes self-expression over reticence.

Stross simply has this one wrong.  Instead of misguided intuition, let’s look at the numbers.  In the Summer/Fall of 2008, Jacob Kramer-Duffield and I ran a survey of undergraduate Facebook users.  We employed a list-based simple random sample, with 494 respondents.  When asked the question Have you changed the default Facebook privacy settings to give yourself enhanced privacy in Facebook?, 72.47% responded “Yes.” To the question Based on your Facebook privacy settings choices, who do you allow to see your Facebook profile?, 50% answered “Only my Facebook friends.” (1)

Stross would also benefit from looking at Lampe et al., 2008, a longitudinal analysis of Facebook use by a cohort of undergraduate students at Michigan State University.  The authors note “In 2006, 64% of users had the default settings for privacy. In 2007, this number dropped to 45% of users who had the default settings, and by users maintained the default privacy settings.” (p. 726)  Williams (2008), employing a SRS at Texas Tech, found that “In regard to public access to their Facebook profile, (50.6%) allowed only their friends to access their page, while (71.0%) stated that the primary target of their communication were friends.” (p. 52)  Williams writes (in her very interesting thesis) “Perhaps this is an indication that Facebook users, in particular at this institution, have greater concerns for invasions of privacy or a greater need to protect their disclosures from the general Facebook audience.”

I could go on.  Strauss, who theoretically has access to a research library, could have skimmed Lewis et al., 2008, Tufekci, 2008 or any of the recent studies put out by the Pew Internet and American Life Project for context.  Since he didn’t, he actually gets the issue backward.  I’ve written about this before, but the basic idea is this: Young people didn’t simply decide to give up privacy.  Rather, the studies show that social network sites, in their early iterations, created a very meaningful sense of close community.  Young people disclosed not because attitudes about privacy instantly and simultaneously changed, but because they felt very comfortable with their audience.  Zimmer continues:

Stross likely doesn’t realize it, but he’s right that sites like Facebook have “[dissolved] the line that separates the private from the public.” In few realms of our lives can we truly identify a strict dichotomy between public and private information. Instead, everything is contextual. And, yes, that’s what makes thinking about privacy difficult, but that doesn’t mean we throw in the towel. Instead, we accept the challenge and work to create policies and build technologies for the sharing of information that properly reflect a contextual notion of privacy, rather than a binary one.

The conclusion that Stross draws – that adults are now going to massively change their disclosure behavior because of young people – is as flawed as his “privacy as anachronism” point.  The real story is that adults are grappling with and establishing norms of privacy in a manner very similar to young people.  This is my summer research topic, so watch this space for more along these lines.  A final point – the 20% statistic.  First, Facebook defaults have changed over the years, so a default now may have been a modification in the past.  Second, Facebook’s audience is increasingly international, so we must remember that norms will vary significantly across nations and cultures.  Third, privacy is not in Facebook’s business interests.  Less privacy = more content, so it may not be in Facebook’s interest to craft a privacy statistic that reflects current norms.

Notes:

(1) This survey was initially presented at the 2008 ASIST Annual Meeting.  We are currently writing it up for publication.

References:

Lampe, C., Ellison, N. B., and Steinfield, C.  (2008).  Changes in use and perception of facebook.  In CSCW ’08: Proceedings of the ACM 2008 conference on Computer supported cooperative work, New York, NY, USA, 2008 (pp. 721-730).  ACM.

Williams, I. M.  (2008).  The Effects of Anticipated Future Interaction and Self Disclosure on Facebook.  Masters thesis, Texas Tech University.

Lewis, K., Kaufman, J., and Christakis, N.  (2008).  The Taste for Privacy: An Analysis of College Student Privacy Settings in an Online Social Network.  Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 14(1), 79-100.

Tufekci, Z.  (2008).  Can You See Me Now? Audience and Disclosure Regulation in Online Social Network Sites.  Bulletin of Science Technology and Society, 28(1), 20-36.  http://bst.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/28/1/20