Social Networks

Entries related to social networks, group psychology, anthropology, and really any of the social sciences.

Wordless Wednesday



Wesley, originally uploaded by Aldon.

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Online Anniversaries

Last Thursday, September 22nd, I received a message from Foursquare letting me know that it was my second anniversary on their site. It was while I was at the Digiday conference on Social Media and that seemed somehow appropriate.

Last year, PodcampCT took place on the 4th anniversary of me being on Twitter, October 16th. This year, I will be in Rochester, MN on the day before a conference on Social Media and Healthcare starts on the 16th.

On Facebook, I installed Timeline last week, only to be told that today, September 26th, is my fifth anniversary on their site. Friends have expressed surprise that I've only been on Facebook for five years, but I point out that it was about five years ago that they finally opened up Facebook to people with email addresses other than at schools.

With all of this, I started looking around for other online firsts for myself that I could find. The earliest I could find was a Usenet post I put up on July 11, 1982. According to Lambda, I joined their MOO on 12/30/1994. On Jan 23, 2002, I joined Ecademy and the earliest blog post I can find there is from 8/21/2002.

Also 2002 is the earliest post I have on Livejournal, dating March 13, 2002. It was based on a discussion I had had on a different MOO.

Over on the political blogs, the earliest post I find on DailyKos was November 10, 2003. This is followed by a post on Greater Democracy on December 10, 2003. I suspect there are a bunch of other posts from that era that I can't find, which is partly prompted me to create Orient Lodge in 2004 as a repository for some of my writing.

There are plenty of other online anniversaries, but at least right now, these are probably the most significant.

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Someone Moved My Bright Shiny New Cheese

It seems like whenever a change comes along to some established technology, there are two predominant reactions that you hear almost immediately. Fans of the technology start screaming, “Ooh, Bright Shiny” as they explore the wonderful new features, while detractors start grumbling about someone moving their cheese. Usually, both camps have something valid to say, but then a new group comes along and complains about the people oohing or grumbling. Lost in all of this are underlying, and perhaps more important issues to be explored.

The latest changes to Facebook seem to fit nicely into this. Some people like the new newsfeed and timeline. Others are grumbling. Now that I’ve played with both the new newsfeed and the new timeline, let me share a few thoughts about the underlying issues what I think are two important underlying issues, engagement and privacy.

In social media marketing, engagement one of those rarely quantified goals that many people chase and few define. I won’t join with the ranks of those who denigrate engagement because of a lack of clear definitions or metrics. Perhaps engagement is like quality, beauty or other ideas that are important and hard to measure, or to borrow an old quote, like pornography; we can’t define it, but we know it when we see it.

Just because we can’t define it, or have a clear quantification, we can compare things relatively. Does the changes in Facebook make more engaging or less engaging? Do the changes make it easier or harder for people using Facebook to engage with their friends and followers?

To the extent that the changes are bright and shiny, that is likely to improve engagement. To the extent that they are moving cheese, they are likely to decrease engagement. That is, of course, until the new changes lose their shine and everyone gets used to the new location of the cheese. Then, we can look at the real impact.

In terms of the newsfeed, I don’t really see it as a big change. It continues to reflect Facebook’s attempt to find what you’re interested in. For people with wide ranging and varied interests, this is likely to be a bad thing. I don’t believe Facebook is going to help these people, and more likely will disappoint them. To borrow from Eli Pariser, Facebook is introducing a new and enhanced Filter Bubble. (See his TED Talk which touches on this.) For others, if it may build engagement, but it may mean that people trying to reach them will end up preaching to the choir.

The timeline is a bit different. Facebook has done a few things right here. They’ve opened it up to developers, and just as the Internet makes it possible for just about anyone to set up a blog and claim they’re a journalist, it also makes it easier for people to claim to be developers and get free previews. I actually set up a developer account a long time to explore linking Facebook and Drupal, so it was very easy for me to start using the new timeline. To the extent that this encourages others to dabble a little more with online development, this is a good thing.

The timeline is a considerable improvement over the old profile pages. As such, it is likely to improve engagement in many ways. Yet others have commented, and I concur, that it looks a bit more like MySpace now, which is noteworthy in a few ways. From a futurist viewpoint, should we be asking if Facebook is the new MySpace? MySpace was flying high once, but not anymore. Will Facebook meet a similar fate?

More importantly, when people think about stalking online, they very often think about MySpace. Now I believe that a lot of the fears about cyberstalking have been overblown, or perhaps more significantly, misdirected. It isn’t the unknown pedophile that is the biggest threat, it is our frenemies, and I suspect that Timeline will encourage inappropriate frenemy behavior.

It may be that Facebook will make it easier to filter out inaccurate information, or other information that you want filtered out. It already has that ability, and is asking me to confirm places where I have not worked, have not gone to college and who are not in fact relatives of mine.

Yet there is other information that it is putting up that I wish that it wouldn’t and I can’t find a nice way to prevent, such as detailed information about distant relatives, and details about various work experiences that are not appropriate. Facebook need to clean this up.

More importantly, there are concerns about other aspects of privacy raised by Dave Winer and others.

Bright Shiny? Moved Cheese? Enhanced Filter Bubble? Privacy Threat? All of this, and more probably applies to Facebook’s latest changes and more. It will be interesting to see how it all shakes out. What’s your take?

#ff @cjpwisdomphotos @lnreynolds @ckieff @adamkmiec @suzboop @dr_manhattan @jodmentum

Sometime over the past couple of days, I reached my 3500 follower on Twitter. It probably happened at Digiday Social where everyone was talking about what matters is engagement and not number of followers.

With that, I'm using Friday Follow Helper again to come up with a list of people that I'm following. It is an odd combination of people, reflecting many different groups I connect with.

Starting off the list is @cjpwisdomphoto, a Connecticut Blogger I sometimes run into. Next is @lnreynolds with whom I often talk about social media as it relates to community health centers. I think I've mentioned both of them recently, so I won't spend more time talking about them today.

Next on the list is @ckieff. I often run into him at #digiday conferences. I didn't see him in New York yesterday, but we did retweet each other a bit. @adamkmiec was one of the speakers at Digiday who did some interesting hypebusting.

@suzboop is a long time friend from nonprofit technology. I used to run into her a bit in virtual worlds, but I haven't been as active in different virtual worlds recently, so it has been a long time since we talked. She listened in on some of the #digiday conference and asked about how it related to #nptech. Hopefully, I'll expand on this more soon.

@dr_manhattan is another interesting contact from the realm of virtual worlds. I'm not sure where I first connected with him, but it was with respect to the virtual worlds, and he shared a link to an android app for virtual worlds that I've started playing with. Very cool!

Ending this weeks list is @jodmentum. We spoke a bit this week about the changes to Facebook and what it means to all of us.

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#digiday Social - Pregame

This morning, I'm sitting on one of the new Metro North trains on my way into New York for Digiday Social. It's a conference I've been to several times before, but this time several things are different.

Starting off, the train is different. It is shiny and new. There are power outlets at every seat. It is also packed, so I'm not next to the outlet. I'm using different devices this time. Currently, I'm typing on a MacBook Pro. I've always used beat up old PCs running either Windows or Linux. It is a nice device. I have a seventeen inch MacBook because I got this, in part for doing video editing. The larger screen is nice, but it makes the device a little bulky.

I still have my old Nokia N900 smartphone with me, but with that, I also have an HTC Thunderbolt, a nice Android device. My N900 only supports 2.5G on AT&T and is getting a bit beat up. The Thunderbolt supports 4G, when it can find it. It is fast, slick, and really nice for social media apps.

These new devices are related to a new role I am attending Digiday in. Other years, I've been there as a freelance blogger and consultant. This year, while I look forward to writing about the event on my own, I am also going as the Social Media Manager for the Community Health Center, Inc.. I'm looking forward to finding information that I'll be able to use at work.

As I sat on the train, I checked my emails, and found one about the new Wall Street Journal Facebook App, WSJ Social. The Journal did a great job with their iPad app and a look forward to exploring their social app.

There are several interesting presentations I look forward to. Shiv Singh, Head of Digital for PepsiCo beverages is always an interesting speaker, and Adam Kmiec, director of Social Media for Walgreen's Hypebusters Presentation: The Social Media Gravy Train Is Over sounds particularly interesting. Since I'm working in health care now, I'll be particularly interested in what he has to say.

A personal interest of mine has always been the role of gaming, and I have high hopes for the Keynote Conversation, Gaming and Social Media, with Electronic Arts SVP of Global Media Solutions, Dave Madden and Zynga's Global Director of Brand Advertising, Manny Anekal.

Finally, it will be time for cocktails, and I look forward to seeing many of my old friends from previous Digiday conferences. Now, on with the show.

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