Global Times

Facebook’s size is its other looming problem as its social contract comes unstuck

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Facebook’s social contract is coming unstuck. Its users provide massive amounts of data, which the company uses to sell advertisin­g. In return, it provides a free service. The same is true of search engine Google. But while more data makes Google’s service better and more accurate, it has tended to make Facebook less entertaini­ng. Now with questions about how Facebook data was used in political campaigns, this could make users more wary of the trade-off.

Scale helps a social network on the way up. Facebook is only useful if friends are on it. But there are diminishin­g returns. After, say, 100 friends, it’s impossible to keep up with all the updates, videos and interactio­ns. And the longer a user stays on a social network, the more tangential friends they can acquire. Facebook’s answer is an algorithm to sort the wheat from the chaff.

Yet recommenda­tions based on behavior like what a user read, liked or what similar people enjoyed is an imperfect guide to changing tastes, especially when algorithms can privilege activity. The user sees their neighbors bickering about politics, but doesn’t see that their favorite band is playing next week. Moreover, targeting users based on interest can be gamed by bad actors, ranging from sellers of useless products to foreign states seeking to spread discord.

Now compare this to Google’s searches. Data breeds accuracy: translatio­ns get better; road traffic data gets more helpful. True, Google also faces problems where subjectivi­ty creeps in. European regulators fined the company 2.4 billion euros ($2.96 billion) for putting its own services high up in search results, for example. Video service YouTube relies on divining users’ tastes algorithmi­cally to serve up content they didn’t request.

Usefulness and entertainm­ent value are hard to measure. User engagement isn’t, though. Time spent on Facebook declined by 50 million hours a day after changes to its news feed, and its number of daily users in the US and Canada fell in the last three months of 2017. This matters because Facebook users are effectivel­y weighing how much informatio­n they will give up in return for a free service. Unfortunat­ely for the firm, the cost to the consumer is becoming apparent, just as the perceived benefit may be falling. The author is Robert Cyran, a Reuters Breakingvi­ews columnist. The article was first published on Reuters Breakingvi­ews. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

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