How My Mom Killed Facebook
Opinion

How My Mom Killed Facebook

iStockphoto

Facebook has always been a cause for handwringing. In its early days, it was seen as a haven of debauchery--exhibit A in the indictment of misguided youth–as college students mindlessly posted pictures and comments. As adults, those same users discovered that their campus carousing might now keep them from gainful employment.

Now as the website settles into comfortable middle age, the handwringing comes from those in the biz-tech community who realize that Facebook’s days of being a hot young commodity are over. But how exactly did this happen? And what does Facebook do now?

It is a fairly well established fact that Facebook has a privacy problem. There have been countless stories of employees losing jobs or not being hired due to material posted on Facebook. Or kids suspended from class for posting pictures of their “sick day”. There have been the various “slut-shaming” controversies, some of which have resulted in suicides. And earlier this summer, Facebook admitted it had accidentally exposed contact information for as many as 6 million users.

But these are extreme examples. The bigger problem with Facebook can be summed up in one sentence: “My mom is on Facebook.”

Once upon a time my Facebook posting was fairly frequent, but it has now slowed to just a couple of times a month. And it’s not that I don’t have the desire to post my thoughts that keeps me from doing it, it’s the knowledge that there is absolutely nothing that I can post about that could not cause problems.

During the courtship period, most of my status updates centered on politics, women, or alcohol, all of which there are very valid reasons to not talk about on Facebook anymore. But a few weeks ago, I thought I had stumbled on a rant that was still safe for our “everybody’s watching me” world: a New Yorker’s frustration with tourists.

ESCALATING PROBLEMS
On a daily basis I arrive at the subway stop at 53rd and 5th, which, for those unfamiliar, has an extremely long escalator ride up from the depths. And frequently there are tourists who don’t realize that an escalator is not a ride, but a method to help you walk faster. I thought that an angry public service announcement about this would make a fine Facebook status update.

RELATED: Facebook’s ‘Graph Search’ No Google Killer

Unfortunately my mother, like any good Midwestern Irish Mom, has decided Facebook is the appropriate place to remind me that I need to be a nicer person. To do this, she responded to the thread with a story about the first time I was on an escalator. As a 4-year-old.

Like any sensible 4-year-old in the late ‘70s. I was convinced that the escalator would eat me at the bottom, and threw a royal temper tantrum in the middle of the Florence Mall, refusing to descend to the ground floor. My mother ultimately had to carry me down the stairs over her shoulder, while my father pretended he had no idea who that screaming child was. Needless to say, this image, of me as a hysterical child afraid of an escalator does not particularly jibe with the ice cool Brooklynite vibe I wish that I projected.

Thus I will never post on Facebook again.

MODERN FAMILY
Lest you think this is just a complicated revenge scheme against my mom (which, let’s be clear, it is), it's this exact phenomenon that keeps driving Facebook’s user engagement numbers down. Far more than the fears about future employment, more than the creepy coworker who “likes” all your bikini pictures, it is the fear of awkward conversations with our relatives that keeps us from posting to Facebook.

This fear is also keeping Facebook from being interesting. We used to view Facebook for the exact same stuff that we are now told never to post; the “I’m so hung over” status messages, the “dancing on top of the bar" videos, and yes, the bikini photos.

By this point in Facebook’s existence, everyone is very much aware that you need to be exceptionally careful of what you post on Facebook. The clear-cut solution for Facebook has been to get its privacy settings perfected in such a way that no one is ever hurt by using the website, but this ignores the fundamental question of why we are on Facebook to begin with…or at least why we used to be.

Discussions of Facebook’s failure to monetize have been numerous. Their advertising models have been either ineffective or disturbingly Orwellian. And their new strategy of sponsored posts have only increased the fundamental problem: Most of us don’t want to be there anymore, and no one will say exactly why. Instead, we get occasional stories about a general concept labeled “Facebook fatigue.”

BINDERS FULL OF WOMEN
Whether it is because writers fear that discussing this will implicate them in unseemly behavior, or at least seem like an endorsement of it, or because Facebook is understandably stingy with its analytics data so that no one can prove what we all believe is happening. The truth is, during its 2006-2009 heyday, Facebook was so wildly popular specifically because it had no privacy settings and no one thought about what they posted.

Look no further than David Fincher’s “The Social Network,” which while fictionalized, has the ring of what Stephen Colbert calls “truthiness.” When stripped of the drama and the Freudian psychoanalysis why did “Mark Zuckerberg” invent “The Facebook”? Because he wanted to look at pictures of women.

Not the abundance of scantily clad women available on the internet, but pictures of women that he interacted with on the Harvard campus…women he may want to date. Facebook was invented as a combination of low-key stalking and very soft-core porn.

To paraphrase Betty Francis (Draper) “Facebook, like everything else these days, is just another excuse to make-out.”

It was voyeurism that made the site so thrilling when it became available to all adults-- not just college students. “Cyber-Stalking” became standard dating practice for singles (of both sexes) during this time. “Does he have cute friends?” “Does she have photos from the beach?” “Do they have weird hobbies or strange political beliefs?”

RELATED: How Facebook Added 100 Million Foreign Users, Fast

While Facebook may not have actively encouraged this, it certainly wanted it. Clicking through every photo on a person’s profile can generate high audience engagement. Not all of the interests were that prurient, but we’ve learned our lesson. “Don’t put that on Facebook, or you’ll never get a job”.

Unlike its predecessors MySpace and Friendster, it would be more difficult for Facebook to simply fade away. It has become the Internet’s phone book (LinkedIn is its Rolodex). Most companies have employees, if not whole departments, dedicated to Facebook outreach. Brands all have pages, and many are taking a chance on the sponsored post idea, but are they posting to an empty room?

Young people are still setting up Facebook pages, but more out of obligation than the thrill of the kids of seven years ago who were discovering something new and exciting. For their thrill-seeking, they’ve moved on to Snapchat, Instagram and other new apps. The only Facebook feature that teens and twenty-something users regularly interact with is chat, which is notoriously impossible to monetize. It’s a communications tool, not a fun site to spend the day surfing.

WORK PROFILE—RETIRED
Older core users are then stuck in the equivalent of a stale marriage. What were once newsfeeds filled with beaches and nightclubs are now filled with puppies, kids, the occasional dinner out or the family vacation. News feeds that were once checked every few minutes are now checked every few days. The thrill is gone, but our lives are too intertwined to separate.

There is already nostalgia for the “old Facebook.”

One group that has really taken to Facebook is seniors, who view it as a good way to stay in touch with their far-flung families and friends. They can look at pictures of their grandchildren and find out what happened to that kid from their high school that never came back to town. They can engage in political conversations or religious debates. Facebook has probably done wonders to help the loneliness of our elderly population, but this only increases Facebook’s problem with the younger demographic. If you thought your dad might give you a hard time about that revealing dress you wore to the club last night, just wait till you hear what Grandma has to say.

So what’s Facebook to do? It can’t go back to the Wild West days of no privacy settings. It can’t turn its back on corporate promotions. It can’t be all things to all people. But is there any way to make it fun again?



TOP READS FROM THE FISCAL TIMES