Why aren’t social networks co-operatives?

The primary aim of a social networking site should be to satisfy of its members. Members do not control such sites; their wants are often slow to be fulfilled or unpopular features introduced.

Facebook fails to have a network for my urban area. If I want to join a geographic network, I have to join that of an urban area, Newcastle, approximately 40 miles away. A Facebook group with nearly 10,000 members exists that lobbies for my area to be made a network exists, but has it been done? No.

Other websites, like MySpace, fail to keep in touch with their users’ needs too. MySpace suffers from featuritis, having introduced pointless services like ‘MySpace Karaoke’ and allowing customisation to such an extent that makes the site inaccessible and inefficient.

Members need a big say in how social networking are operated.

Simply stating that if a site fails to meet the needs of its users, that they will stop using that site, is not a satisfactory solution. These sites are primarily a community comprising smaller communities (social networks), and if users leave for other sites, these communities are torn apart and social networking becomes even more time-consuming, as users must use several sites.

The solution? Co-operation: ‘an autonomous association of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly-owned and democratically-controlled enterprise’.

If members owned the service they use, they could use their democratic voice to get features they want and to ensure that a positive user experience is maintained.

The securing of initial capital obviously proves a problem. However, if each member had to pay an amount – whether £1, £2 or £10 – for a share (and say in the site’s future), this could raise it. This might work especially well for niche social networks, as people willing to contribute to the site’s initial capital could be quickly identified and targeted. Niche networks have been known to rapidly grow. For example, Facebook was originally for students at Harvard and within one month, over half of that university’s undergraduate population had joined(see this article).

Paying for the upkeep of the site could be a problem too, but member-owners would be able to choose which revenue model they preferred. If the members were willing to pay to subscribe, they could democratically indicate their desire to do so. If members would rather face advertisements, they could democratically choose to do that. At the moment, if social networking sites were to make this decision, it would be somewhat experimental as they could not truly know what their members desired. Consequently, some sites use intrusive adverts, whilst others charge for membership in situations where it is inappropriate.

Of course, some social networking sites are already semi-democratic. Facebook had a ‘Site Governance Vote’ in April 2009, but this was only about changes to the terms of service (something I suspect most members aren’t faintly interested about). This vote was effectively useless. For it to be binding, it needed a 30% turnout. It achieved roughly 3%. Privacy International described it as a ‘massive confidence trick’. In a way, it was important topic on which to vote, but members should be able to vote on issues important to them, not just topics on which the company wants them to vote.

Social networking sites are communities, not just companies. A community should be democratically-controlled in order to ensure its needs are best met and that it can grow in a sustainable and responsible fashion, rather than a fashion in which the main aim is generating higher profits.

Living off a smartphone

Technology — Tags: , , , , , , , — Joe Anderson @ 7:04 pm Friday 31 July 2009

I have been without my MacBook Pro for nearly a fortnight, following the failure of its graphics card. Whilst I am assured by an Apple Authorised Service Point that it is on its way back to me, I have found it fascinating that for 75% of my usual computer-related tasks, I didn’t need a computer!

A few years ago, without a computer, I would have been without access to instant messaging or the World Wide Web. Today, I can still access most social networking sites, the Web and still chat to my buddies without one.

Smartphones are, quite simply, amazing.

I can fulfill most of the social aspects of the Internet solely off my phone. I have Twitter, MSN, Google Talk; if I wanted I could even access Facebook, MySpace or protocols as obscure as IRC!

Whilst it isn’t quite as easy to communicate from a smartphone, you can still do a satisfactory job.

Information and socialising is now amazingly portable.

Whilst smartphones won’t replace laptops or desktops, due to it being impractical to do proper research on a small screen or typing a letter on a small keyboard, I do believe the role of traditional computers is only going to diminish.

Keep a comment blog with Amplify

A few weeks ago, Eric Goldstein, CEO of Clipmarks, invited me to his new website: Amplify. Amplify allows users to share clippings (like excerpts of text or images) much like Clipmarks, but encourages its users to comment on it and then the combined commentary and clipping are displayed together on a blog.

The uses are interesting. Amplify is a good way to quickly express an opinion on a topical issue and to share lesser known news stories. These can then be posted to Twitter, del.icio.us and/or Clipmarks through the site: maximising exposure.

The site also has a social element. You can comment on others posts and allow others to post on your ‘cliplog’, so many are ground cliplogs for specific projects etc.

WordPress MU is used so when you log-in, you face a familiar WordPress admin interface and you manage comments and users in the same fashion you manage WordPress users.

I like Amplify because it allows me to easily run a political blog (which can be seen here). I can clip stories that I want to share or discuss and write a minimal amount of opinion, but sufficiently communicate my viewpoint. I’ve even had a few complete strangers comment on my clips, and they’ve then retweeted them! It also displays retweets on the clipblog under comments.

Amplify allows users to log-in through Twitter’s OAUTH or to get their own account. Amplify, like Clipmarks, is well worth a look and is actually a really enjoyable but easy form of blogging.

Track your friends on different networks with friendbinder

Internet — Tags: , , , — Joe Anderson @ 11:18 pm Monday 17 November 2008

Invite-only friendbinder is a website which allows you to keep track of your friends on several social networking sites. Unlike FriendFeed, these friends do not have to be members of friendbinder in order to follow them.

The site allows you to organise your friends into 5 different ‘interest levels’, so you can separate your actual friends from contacts. Friends can be added from Twitter, Digg, del.icio.us, last.fm, YouTube and Facebook and their RSS feeds can also be added; but contacts from these sites are not automatically grouped together on friendbinder (eg, I must manually tell friendbinder ‘bloggs55′ on Twitter is the same as ‘bloggs55′ on Digg).

friendbinder can be used to update Twitter and Facebook status, which is a nice addition which in essence means you do not have to go on Twitter.

I still find myself questioning the need for friendbinder when we have services like FriendFeed, Ziki and Profilactic. I guess what makes friendbinder unique is the fact you can rank friends in terms of interest. I do, however, find it annoying that so much has to be done manually on the site; whilst all contacts can be imported, accounts on different sites must be manually associated. Sadly, as our partner The Last Podcast pointed out, there are also no RSS feeds from the site itself.

friendbinder is definitely just a binder. It allows all your friends’ social activity to be collated in a central location, whilst having little social networking in itself. The one main feature is that this social activity can be filtered, which I’m sure is essential if, like me, you are following 100s of people but only frequently talk with a dozen of them.

The site, with its last.fm-like design, needs polishing and should become increasingly automated. Social networking junkies will have their uses for the site, but it unfortunately lacks support for several essential networks (such as Friendfeed).

Social network snobbery

Internet — Tags: , , , , , , , — Joe Anderson @ 10:45 pm Tuesday 28 October 2008

Rory Cellan-Jones of the BBC described LinkedIn as ‘Facebook for losers’, which got me thinking about the reputations which social networking sites have.

I also considered LinkedIn as the social networking website for professionals, not ‘losers’, and I must agree with an astute commenter, Jim_Panzie, on the BBC blog:

LinkedIn is a great way to keep up with Professional contacts, Facebook and Myspace just didn’t work for me they seemed to be for kids

Perhaps LinkedIn is for people who ‘want to put their CV out’, but even that is a form of networking (just perhaps not as social as Facebook etc).

Facebook used to seem relatively sophisticated when compared to MySpace, and it struck me as attracting an elder and better educated audience. TechCrunch ventured to even claim that choosing between the two was simply an IQ test!

TechCrunch, in 2007, stated that the introduction of widgets into Facebook was a fantastic idea but it has lowered the tone of the network. An increasing amount of young people consequently started to use Facebook and it made the site lose some of its social element and made it more into a playground.

MySpace and Bebo generally stir up images of a bunch of teenagers with distasteful backgrounds and music.

I steer clear of major social networking sites; they’re more hassle than they’re worth and make us unproductive.

Different ages, and classes, use different social networks. Class divides, even online.

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