Facebook rant

I’ve had just about enough of Facebook - I’m finding more and more reasons to turn it off as time passes. Here’s why.

  1. Walled garden. If I add my content to Facebook, it’s still my content. I should be able to do what I like with it. If I add a photo in Facebook, or add a video in Facebook, I can’t embed a thumbnail link to it from my blog. And if I want to get my information out, I can’t. This makes me very nervous about putting it in.

  2. Sucky user experience. Where do I start? If I want to track all the changes made by all my friends, I can’t. I just get a selection chosen by Facebook (alright, I can change the emphasis by stating my preferences, but what if I want all changes and all additions by all my friends?). What if I want to follow these changes via my chosen centralised tool (my RSS feed reader)? I can’t.

  3. Poor treatment of developers. As my colleague has found, if you build applications using Facebook’s tools, they have a habit of changing their platform without warning. Net result; broken application. What if your livelihood depended on this? And some developers have reported that their ideas have been stolen by Facebook. There’s no way of proving that Facebook weren’t already developing these ideas themselves beforehand, but there is an awful lot of smoke.

It all smacks of arrogance. At the recent FOWA conference, Dave Morin (Senior Platform Manager at Facebook) talked about how the photo app was built in two weeks. And how the events app was built in a day. If they can make changes this quickly, why haven’t I seen any improvements on the site since I started using it in March? Are they too busy playing frisbee with Google? Why aren’t they communicating with us? I mean, one blog entry since 26 September is hardly keeping an open dialogue.

I’ve already predicted that future competitive products will be more open. Perhaps if this is true, Facebook will open up their platform to match. I honestly don’t think they’ll have much of a choice. In other words, they might be milking their current system (forcing people to their site to watch their adverts) for all it’s worth for as long as they can. And we, their customers, simply cannot let them get away with this if it turns out to be the case.

To be fair, I’ve also been thinking about what I like about Facebook. I like the fact that I’ve used it to reconnect with friends I’d lost touch with. Some of the applications are interesting. And I like that I get some information from people that I wouldn’t otherwise get. But most of the useful updates I receive via Facebook are from other people’s twitter feeds i.e. I get those already. Now, if I could just convince my friends in Facebook to move over to Twitter, I wouldn’t need Facebook any more. They can link to their photos on Flickr or somewhere else. They can link to their videos on Youtube. And we can follow and filter all this either in real time (via Twitteriffic) or at leisure (RSS feed). No need for Facebook any more.