Sun.Star Pampanga

The Mark Zuckerberg manifesto: How he plans to debug the world

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NEW YORK — Mark Zuckerberg's long-term vision for Facebook, laid out in a sweeping manifesto , sometimes sounds more like a utopian social guide than a business plan. Are we, he asks, "building the world we all want?"

While most people now use Facebook to connect with friends and family, Zuckerberg hopes that the social network can encourage more civic engagement, an informed public and community support in the years to come. Facebook now has nearly 2 billion members, which makes it larger than any nation in the world.

His 5,800-word essay positions Facebook in direct opposition to a rising tide of isolationi­sm and fear of outsiders, both in the U.S. and abroad.

In a phone interview with The Associated Press, Zuckerberg stressed that he wasn't motivated by the U.S. election or any other particular event. Rather, he said, it's the growing sentiment in many parts of the world that "connecting the world" — the founding idea behind Facebook — is no longer a good t h i n g.

"Across the world there are people left behind by globalizat­ion, and movements for withdrawin­g from global connection," Zuckerberg, who founded Facebook in a Harvard dorm room in 2004, wrote on Thursday. "In times like these, the most important thing we at Facebook can do is develop the social infrastruc­ture to give people the power to build a global community that works for all of us."

Zuckerberg, 32, told the AP that he still strongly believes that more connectedn­ess is the right direction for the world. But, he adds, it's "not enough if it's good for some people but it's doesn't work for other people. We really have to bring everyone along."

It's hardly a surprise that Zuckerberg wants to find ways to bring more people together, especially on Facebook. After all, getting more people to come together on the social network more frequently would give Facebook more opportunit­ies to sell the ads that generate most of its revenue, which totaled $27 billion last year. And bringing in more money probably would boost Facebook's stock price to make Zuckerberg — already worth an estimated $56 billion — even richer.

And while the idea of unifying the world is laudable, some critics — backed various studies — contend Facebook makes some people feel lonelier and more isolated as they scroll through the mostly ebullient posts and photos shared on the social network. Facebook's famous "like" button also makes it easy to engage in a form of "one-click" communicat­ion that replaces meaningful dial ogue.

Facebook also has been lambasted as polarizing force by circulatin­g posts espousing similar viewpoints and interests among like-minded people, creating an "echo chamber" that can harden opinions and widen political and cultural chasms.

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