Founded | January 4, 2004 |
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Headquarters | Hacker City, California, USA |
Owner | StealYourInfo LLC |
Key people |
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Industry | The Great Zoomer pastime |
Products |
“FaceBook? Can all be traced back to one man - Mark Zuckerberg! Keep it quiet!”
Facebook is one of The Internet's largest personal information thieves. Launched in 2004, Facebook has since garnered over 2.45 billion unique personal information entries. It makes these entries available on a regular basis to its clients, which include advertisers, data miners, authoritarian governments and, on occasion, private individuals. The personal data is organized into individual entries called "profiles", each of which typically includes a name, photos, phone numbers, email addresses, marital status, and miscellaneous unique information. Profiles are further organized into groups, and linked by friends lists. Now we know who doesn't have a life. Minecraft is better.
Valued at approximately 1,300 billion pesos, Facebook is the largest competitor to the Internet's incumbent personal information collector, Google.
History
In the mid-2000s Myspace was the dominant personal information database on the Internet. It hosted nearly twenty million individual profiles of personal information, the highest number of profiles ever seen at the time. However, its customers often complained that the flashy, poorly coded eye-rape that it called "profile designs" made it difficult to harvest the data contained on the profiles. Many of Myspace's profiles were decorated with hundreds of animated GIFs, brightly colored backgrounds, and blinking text. These and other elements caused headaches and eye strain among advertisers, who flooded Myspace's customer service department with complaints.
In February 2004 a young thief, humanoid robot lizard, and Harvard student named Mark Zuckerberg posted his beta version of a site called Facemash wherein users could rate the hotness levels of others' pictures. After attracting over twenty thousand views within four hours, Zuckerberg caught the attention of the Winklevoss twins. The Winklevoss twins had been working on a social media website called "Winkleboo", which had the potential to overtake Myspace, due to their brilliant idea to start out as an exclusive website available only to Harvard students, then expand to other universities, then ultimately let everyone join. The Winklevoss twins explained this to Zuckerberg and asked if he would build the website for them. Zuckerberg said he would, but immediately began building his own website using their exclusivity strategy. He also rejected the Winklevosses' dumb name and chose "Thefacebook", which was later shortened to Facebook. Taking note of the chief complaint about competitor Myspace, Zuckerberg designed Facebook to have a clean, easily readable interface that could not be clogged up with embedded YouTube gangster rap videos and pictures of glittering cats.
Business model and clients
“Facebook accomplished in five years what the CIA’s been trying to do for nearly a century.”
Facebook's source of income is selling access to its collections of personal information. It serves a variety of interests, the majority of which are advertising companies who use the data acquired from Facebook to push targeted ads across the Internet, including on Facebook itself. It also does business with data mining companies that seek to assemble their own personal profiles on people for their own reasons, as well as spammers who harvest email addresses. Eventually, Facebook became large enough that national governments began to take notice, realizing that Facebook's treasure trove of personal information could represent a significant advancement towards their long-term goals of totalitarianism and despotism. Soon, Facebook began offering its services to authoritarian governments, such as those of China, Russia, and the United States of America.
While Facebook generally reserves its services for governments and the corporate elite, it has been known to occasionally do business with individuals. A well-publicized 2008 incident revealed Facebook's dealings with a British man who purchased access to his ex-girlfriend's personal information and used it to stalk her. Similarly, in 2010, three students at a New York high school pooled their college funds and bought the information of one of their classmates, which they used to blackmail him. Major news outlets have published news stories about employers who fire their employees because they said something on Facebook the employer disagrees with. And while rumors have circulated about politicians using information obtained from Facebook to embarrass or discredit their rivals, no proof of such an incident has ever surfaced, although Facebook has not denied that they would be open to negotiating such a deal.
In order to entice potential clients, Facebook offers some of its personal information for free, making it easily viewable by anyone. Many profiles are publicly available, offering information such as names, locations, and photos. Other information, such as private conversations and phone numbers, as well as information stored on profiles that are not publicly viewable, can be accessed by clients who have a contract with Facebook.
“Facebook collects its personal information from the unwashed masses. In exchange for token services offered by the company, users voluntarily provide their data to Facebook, who retains it indefinitely. As compensation for their personal information, Facebook offers its users such amenities as FarmVille, Mafia Wars, and monitored communication with other users. The deal has proven to be exceptionally beneficial for Facebook, which receives significant value in exchange for the mediocre services it provides.”
Features
Facebook offers a number of features to its clients:
- Strong data retention. It is very difficult for users to remove personal information from Facebook's servers, as simply closing an account will not delete anything. Facebook assures its clients that once it collects personal information, it is stored permanently so Zuckerberg can learn more about humans.
- No confusion about data ownership. Facebook's Terms of Service, to which users must agree when creating an account, automatically give Facebook complete ownership of anything posted on the site. Clients do not need to be concerned about potential ownership or copyright issues that may arise from acquiring users' personal data, as Facebook owns it and can do whatever it wants with it.
- One central, convenient data storage location. It is not possible to export personal information from Facebook in a way that is compatible with competing services, such as Myspace or Google . Facebook's use of vendor lock-in ensures that clients need not look anywhere else for all their data-mining needs.
- Great deals! Occasionally, Facebook will host promotions wherein certain information on all profiles is made public for free, even if it was private before. These changes in privacy settings essentially represent gifts to the advertising community, which in turn helps attract potential customers to Facebook.
- An unmatched selection of profiles to choose from. Facebook has more than 750 million profiles, each of which hosts information about a given individual. However, thanks to image tagging, Facebook also has profiles on millions of people who are not on Facebook. Facebook claims that no competitor can offer such an extensive selection.
- Use custom applications to fill your specific needs. All Facebook customers are invited to publish their own applications, which users can add to their profiles. This allows clients to customize the personal information that is gathered from users.
- High numbers of
conspiracy theoristsreasonable people that share beliefs to you. Due to Facebook's popularity, it is only inevitable that these people have arrived, and we welcome them.
Reception
Facebook has become wildly popular, having overtaken Myspace in April 2008, and has received worldwide acclaim in the media. It has been praised for its exceptional customer service, its ease of use, and its complete lack of discrimination with regards to its business partners. It is ranked by Alexa as the second-most popular website in the United States, behind Google. In 2007, PC Magazine ranked Facebook among its top 100 data-mining websites. As of 2010, Facebook had won Crunchie's "Best Overall Startup or Product" award for three years in a row.
The unwashed masses, from which Facebook harvests its personal information, have had mixed reactions to the site. Some regard Facebook as the pinnacle of human evolution, and in February of 2011, an Egyptian couple named their daughter after the site. In May of the same year, an Israeli couple named their daughter after Facebook's "like" feature. On the opposite end of the spectrum, a number of critics have denounced Facebook as a tool of the New Corporate One World Order, and warned that its continued popularity will contribute to the downfall of civilization as we know it.
In 2008 the Collins English Dictionary officially declared facebooking a word, which means "selling your soul for bread and circuses".
See also
A Series of Tubes | ||
Internet - Internets - World Wide Web | ||
Software |
Apps - Blog - Browsers - CSS - E-mail - Flash - Forum - HTTP - HTTP errors - IRC - PHP - Warez - Website - Wikis | |
Browsers | Internet Explorer - Mozilla (Mozilla Firefox) - Google Chrome - Opera | |
Social |
4chan - AVAKuma - Bilibili - Digg - Discord - Facebook - Google - Instagram - LinkedIn - MySpace - Pinterest - Reddit - Skype - TikTok - Tumblr - | |
Search | Ask.com - Baidu - Bing - Google - Google Earth - Nipples Search Engine - Yahoo! | |
Websites |
Al Qaeda Homepage - Amazon - Chatroulette - Change.org - Cracked.com - DeviantART - eBay - Encyclopedia Dramatica - Fanfiction.net - Famous Birthdays - Geocities - Goatse - IMDB - iStockphoto - Livejournal - OnlyFans - PETA Homepage - Rotten Tomatoes - Snopes - TPB - TV Tropes - Urban Dictionary - Wayback Machine - Wikipedia - Uncyclopedia | |
Culture | Internet (video game) - Internet humor - Internet-speak - Pornography - Rule 34 of the Internet - Spam - W3C | |
Formats |
Quasi-Featured Article (20 December 2011)