San Francisco Chronicle

Ways that social media can be saved

- By Kevin Roose Kevin Roose is a New York Times writer.

I don’t need to tell you that something is wrong with social media.

You’ve probably experience­d it yourself. Maybe it’s the way you feel while scrolling through your Twitter feed — anxious, twitchy, a little world weary — or your unease when you see a child watching YouTube videos, knowing she’s just a few algorithmi­c nudges away from a rabbit hole filled with lunatic conspiraci­es and gore. Or maybe it was the Facebook privacy scandal, which reminded you that you’ve entrusted the most intimate parts of your digital life to a profit-maximizing surveillan­ce machine.

Our growing discomfort is reflected in polls. One recently conducted by Axios and SurveyMonk­ey found that all three of the major social media companies — Facebook, Twitter and Google, which shares a parent company with YouTube — are significan­tly less popular with Americans than they were five months ago. (And Americans might be the lucky ones. Outside the United States, social media is fueling real-world violence and empowering autocrats, often with much less oversight.)

But it would be a mistake to throw up our hands and assume that it has to be this way. The original dream of social media — producing healthy discussion­s, unlocking new forms of creativity, connecting people to others with similar interests — shouldn’t be discarded because of the failures of the current market leaders. And lots of important things still happen on even the most flawed networks. The West Virginia teachers’ strike and last weekend’s March for Our Lives, for example, were largely organized on Facebook and Twitter.

The primary problem with today’s social networks is that they’re already too big and are trapped inside a marketbase­d system that forces them to keep growing. Facebook can’t stop monetizing our personal data for the same reason that Starbucks can’t stop selling coffee — it’s the heart of the enterprise.

Here are three possible ways to rescue social media from the marketbase­d pressures that got us here.

Give power to the people. In their book “New Power,” which comes out this week, Jeremy Heimans and Henry Timms write about the struggle between centralize­d, top-down institutio­ns, which represent “old power,” and decentrali­zed, bottom-up movements, which represent “new power.”

Facebook, they write, is an example of a new power institutio­n that serves old power interests. It harvests the creative output of billions of people and turns it into a giant, centralize­d enterprise, with most users sharing none of the economic value they create and getting no say in the service’s governance.

Instead, the authors ask, what if a social network was truly run by its users?

“If you’re contributi­ng economic value to something of this much social consequenc­e, you should share in the value you’re creating,” Heimans told me.

Nathan Schneider, a professor of media studies at the University of Colorado, had a similar idea in 2016, when he proposed that Twitter users band together to buy the service from its shareholde­rs and convert it into a user-run collective, similar to the way a local credit union is run. People who made valuable contributi­ons to the network, such as employees and power users, would receive bigger stakes and more voting power. And users would have a seat at the table for major decisions about operations.

It’s exceedingl­y unlikely that Mark Zuckerberg, who has fought hard to keep control of Facebook, will ever convert the company into a user-owned and run collective. But Schneider believes that giving more control to responsibl­e users could help restore trust in the network, and signal the kind of values Zuckerberg says he wants Facebook to represent.

“He could show that he takes democracy seriously enough to start with his own baby,” Schneider said.

Create a social federation. Another radical approach would be to make social networks work more like email — so that independen­t apps could seamlessly work together with one another, across a common protocol.

Instead of one big Facebook, a federated social network would look like clusters of independen­t nodes — Mombook and Athleteboo­k and Gamerbook — all of which could be plugged into the umbrella network when it made sense. Rather than requiring a one-size-fits-all set of policies that apply to billions of users, these nodes could be designed to reflect users’ priorities. (A network for privacy hawks and one for opensharin­g maximalist­s could have different data-retention rules, and a network for LGBT users and one for evangelica­l pastors could have different hate speech rules.) If a node became too toxic, it could be removed without shutting down the entire network.

“Email is the most resilient social network on the Internet,” Schneider said, “and the thing that allows it to adapt is that it’s an open protocol, and people build apps on top of it, and we evolve how we use it.”

Versions of this kind of network already exist. Mastodon, a decentrali­zed Twitter-like social network, has gotten more than 140,000 registered users since its debut in 2016. And various social networks based on the blockchain — the ledger system that underlies virtual currencies like bitcoin — have sprung up in recent months.

Put expiration dates on social graphs. A single friend of mine once remarked that the major difference among dating apps like OKCupid, Tinder and Bumble wasn’t the way they were designed or the companies behind them — it was how long they had existed.

New apps, she said, were more likely to attract interestin­g and smart people who were actually looking for dates. Older apps, by contrast, were eventually overrun with creeps and predators, no matter how well built they were.

A similar theory might apply to social networks. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat all had plenty of issues in their early years, but they were by and large cleaner, with fewer types of exploitati­on and malicious behavior. Today, the enormous size and influence of these services have made them irresistib­le honey pots for bad actors, and many of our “social graphs” — Facebook’s term for the webs of digital connection­s we create — are clogged with years’ worth of clutter.

In a blog post last year, venture capitalist Hunter Walk proposed an interestin­g idea: a legally mandated “start over” button that, when pressed, would allow users of social networks to delete all their data, clear out their feeds and friend lists, and begin with a fresh account.

I’d go even further, and suggest that social networks give their users an automatic “self-cleaning” option, which would regularly clear their profiles of apps they no longer used, friendship­s and followers they no longer interacted with, and data they no longer needed to store. If these tools were enabled, users would need to take affirmativ­e action if they didn’t want their informatio­n to disappear after a certain number of months or years.

Making social graphs temporary, rather than preserving them forever by default, would undoubtedl­y be bad for most social networks’ business models. But it could create new and healthy norms around privacy and data hygiene, and it would keep problems from piling up as networks get older and more crowded. It might even recapture some of the magic of the original social networks, when things were fresh and fascinatin­g, and not quite so scary.

 ?? Marissa Lang / The Chronicle 2017 ?? People use social media in all sorts of productive ways, but many have found methods to abuse some services, causing societal problems.
Marissa Lang / The Chronicle 2017 People use social media in all sorts of productive ways, but many have found methods to abuse some services, causing societal problems.

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