(no subject)
Aug. 11th, 2014 05:32 pmThere's a Wired article going around Facebook describing what happened when the author "liked" everything on his feed for 48 hours. It's silly, so I'm not going to link to it.
As one of my friends put it, "It's not actually an argument against using likes on facebook, it's an argument against using likes indiscriminately."
Garbage-in, garbage-out. I imagine one can create something pretty awful using Pandora, as well. But an article about that wouldn't get passed around as much.
As one of my friends put it, "It's not actually an argument against using likes on facebook, it's an argument against using likes indiscriminately."
Garbage-in, garbage-out. I imagine one can create something pretty awful using Pandora, as well. But an article about that wouldn't get passed around as much.
(no subject)
Date: 2014-08-12 05:29 am (UTC)On the other hand, it isn't that hard to create a Facebook feed that shows you what you actually want to see, if you do so consciously looking at the bigger picture as you use it. I think of it mostly as an advertising medium and tailor my likes accordingly. I had the opportunity to experiment with this after losing access to my original account a few years ago. I started fresh with the online name people know me by.
Generally I think the experiment has worked well. I'm not sure I'd recommend restarting Facebook at all if I hadn't decided to experiment with the service, but as an experiment it has provided endless hours of entertainment. I probably spend more hours with it than I ought!
But if the problem with your Facebook feed is that it's showing you lots of rage-inducing stuff, it might well be time to reboot. There's certainly a larger Internet problem that exists but at least with Facebook you have the opportunity to start fresh explicitly.
Perhaps I should do a post about the experiment and the thinking behind what I did.