As if ruling the Web werenât enough, Facebook has now begun to dominate other media. "The Social Network," Hollywoodâs fictionalized portrayal of site founder Mark Zuckerberg, has grossed $213 million to date and was recently nominated for eight Academy Awards. Zuckerberg himself was named Time magazineâs 2010 Person of the Year. On TV, CNBC profiled the company earlier this month in its documentary "The Facebook Obsession." And so on. As the siteâs ubiquity dovetails with continuing concerns about its commitment to user privacy, it may be time to ask: is Facebook inescapable?
According to NYU telecommunications professor Clay Shirky, the answer is a resounding yes. In his interviews with Big Think, Shirky has repeatedly argued that Facebook and other social media are becoming permanently woven into our societyâs fabric. Even as of a few years ago, Shirky says, âI had to make a case at the beginning of any given talk thatâ¦the social stuff wasnât all just going to be teens on Facebookâ¦[itâs] going to become generally, culturally important.â The influence of social media in Obamaâs election changed all that.
It's a trend Shirky doesn't think will reverse anytime soon, even as periodic outcries over user privacy management (or mismanagement) continue to dog the company. Says Shirky "I think Facebook is going to be fine. Facebook has a long history of planning a change in the service that's good for them in some way or another, overstepping their bounds, apologizing and scaling backâ"but not scaling back to the point they were before the change. In a way, Facebook now uses the overstep-apology-reaction pattern as a way of saying how far they can go at any given cultural moment."
Speaking of cultural moments, Shirky doesnât think itâs really Facebook itself weâre all fretting about. Like Napster in the 1990s, itâs just the scapegoat du jour for our fears about the Internet itself. And if "The Social Network" can be believed, Zuckerberg serenely accepts all this, having been mentored by Napsterâs co-founder, the charismatic Justin Timâ"er, Sean Parker. Like peer-to-peer file sharing, social networking is definitely here to stay. Whether Facebook itself will continue to boom, howeverâ"or whether, as a company, it will go the way of Napsterâ"remains to be seen. But given it's recent $82 billion valuation, it's not going anywhere anytime soon.
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