Monday, 24 May 2010

What Facebook is missing out on...

It strikes me as somewhat absurd that Facebook don’t see the opportunity they are presented with in face of the recent criticism. The criticism, as you are probably well aware off, is in my view best summed up in Leif Harmsen’s words “It is not ‘your’ Facebook profile. It is Facebook’s profile about you”, he considers it a repressive regime akin to North Korea, and he’s not alone. Yet this isn’t anything new. It’s more a case of the “commoners” starting to question what the more tech savvy ones of us have questioned for quite some time, and thus the topic has gained some momentum in the mainstream press as well.

The problem is obvious, as problems often are, but the solutions keep escaping the minds of clever people. Or does it really? A related debate I have followed since I first heard a discussion about social networking 3.0 at Stanford in 2007, is about how we can transfer ownership, and more importantly control over user information to the users. The simplest solution is of course just to pressure sites like Facebook to change their terms of use, but a more lasting solution would include the possibility for users to bring their friends, pictures and other information with them between social networking sites. Undoubtedly there are many design issues for such a system, for example I certainly have multiple online identities; my Facebook content isn’t really suitable for my LinkedIn page and so on. And where would my information be hosted? Would I have to buy server space in case someone wanted to view my profile while I was online? Would the standard allow new networking sites to add slots for specific information that were only suitable for that site (like favorite recipes for a cooking site, or where I’ve been for a scuba diving site), and how would I controll what and how much  information is sent to each site I visit?

This however isn’t the biggest problem; the reason why such systems haven’t been implemented is that no one with the leverage to create this system has done it yet. This system has to be made by the right people, people that can reach critical mass. At present, only geeks and idealists would bother to learn how to use a totally new system, especially because something like that sounds very complicated. The average user doesn’t want complicated stuff, they want simplicity, and they just want to use the product. So to reach critical mass for such a system you would have to have some way of gaining a lot of users for it fast. Like a big already existing user base, like Facebook has, but wait - why should Facebook make this system? Facebook like it the way it is, they own your content (or their content about you to be accurate), and can use it for pretty much whatever they want. In addition to this Facebook enjoys users that have extremely high switching costs, something which might be their biggest competitive advantage. It seems that Facebook is in a perfect place.

So why should Facebook do it?
The first reason why Facebook should create a system for sharing information is that it would buy them credit. It would buy them credit with the tech community for being open and with the media for listening to them. It would buy them credit with normal users because they would feel safer and because they have the option to leave. Remember why some people escaped the Matrix? It turned out that given an unconscious choice nearly 99 % of test subjects would accept the program anyway. I see no reason why this shouldn’t hold true for Facebook as well, as the primary reason people leave is because they are malcontent by Facebook’s closed systems and strict privacy policy (at least if we believe random Internet chatter - which we do).

Secondly, and maybe more importantly, I believe that if Facebook don’t do this, others will. Services such as Google Accounts and Open ID don’t have a long way to go to allow users to store information that at their request can used by third party sites. Right now Facebook can deny Open ID and other such services to provide login to their site, but can they still do that in 3 years? Right now they can delay the inevitable move to such services, but as I wrote in a blog post some time ago, change happens when change is due. Change isn’t always created willingly, it’s just there and those that catch the wave gain momentum, furthermore no surfer ever caught the back of a wave. If people gets used to logging in to their favorite sites through a third party provider, I’m not sure Facebook can withhold the pressure.

The third reason Facebook should use their user base to create an open, user owned system that can transfer information easily from site to site is that whatever disadvantage Facebook sees in having users logging in to their site via a third party provider will be Facebook’s advantage against new social sites. If users are used to using their Facebook login when they log into pages on the net, they will expect new sites to follow this convention, thus granting Facebook some limited power to monitor and control new services.

The fourth reason Facebook should do this is because there’s bound to be a business model in it. What this model is, I’m not sure, but it could for example be that commercial sites would have to pay a small fee to use the service, or that when you log in you get redirected through Facebook’s ad page.

The fifth and final reason is that this would be a good first step towards extending into new forms of web services. When users already have a login, it should be easier to gain momentum for new and exciting products. Google has already realized this when they launched both Wave and Buzz (though this seems to be bad examples, as both services are virtual ghost towns). Having a customer base like Facebook’s is an incredible asset, in the case of Facebook an asset that remains close to unexploited. Surely marketing new web services through Facebook would ensure enough users to create critical mass for many services?

Maybe Facebook as we know it today is just a stepping stone? I certainly think that they should consider expanding their services, and specifically they should start making a product that they could easily gain market leadership with almost immediately, namely an open profile service that provides an API for other services to let users log in with their Facebook profiles. With the share number of users Facebook has it shouldn’t be a problem becoming the market leader in this "sort of related" market.

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