"Most evil man on the planet" is an exaggeration, depending on how one defines evil, but I stand by the general claim.
fair enough.
There are many experts in info-tech or sociology who believe that today's social media has severely deleterious consequences and is literally leading to the demise of progressive democracy. You blame "humanity being a shitty cesspool of dumb fucks" but I don't think IQ or education is worse now than it was during the 19th and 20th centuries — a time when America's democracy gradually improved. It is wrong to blame our increasing social and political problems entirely on a single cause, but woes due to electronic connectivity must be very high on the list of causes.
i agree with you that since social media became prolific there has been a notable and quantifiable decline in the general state of humanity, but i disagree with you that "social media" is at fault here.
the issue is that humans are fucktards, and what the internet did is let all of the fucktards out.
blaming the medium by which humanity destroys itself is like blaming the water for being full of pee after 7.9 billion toddlers sat in it for 20 years.
If one admits that social media is a problem in general, it isn't hard to see that Facebook is particularly pernicious.
i guess that's the issue here then, i admit that social media is a problem
for humanity in general, because humanity is too fucking stupid to use it without shitting themselves to death over it.
but i blame that on humanity, not on a single webpage.
In many countries, Facebook and Internet are essentially synonyms for millions of people. The Facebook interface is designed deliberately to employ "customers" as unpaid servants. Like slot machines, Facebook's interface is designed to provide only intermittent gratification, and in response to directed user actions. (Forced to use Facebook due to family pressure, I have seen messages from Facebook informing me that I need to participate more to get access to my entire newsfeed!)
see this where "you know what? fuck you, facebook" is the universal solution to every problem, and in my hyperbolic anecdotal experience only about 17 people alive on the planet today were clever enough to figure that out.
now i'll concede there's some pretty serious issues where access to technology is limited - i'm aware of the reality of 'facebook' and 'the internet' being the same thing in some countries, and that should definitely by addressed by expanding access in those areas.
Calling Zuckerberg a "random guy" is confused. Whatever his IQ he is driven by ruthless ambition. Top FB executives have revealed that some of his public answers in Congressional testimony were lies.
yeah see, you keep quoting that, and that seems like a completely reasonable exchange to be had by an early 20-something in that situation.
that's just... humanity in action.
an exceedingly rare portion of the human population might have their entire community's personal information and trust dropped into their lap and be genuinely ethical with it and take it as a grave responsibility, or perhaps even go the heroic sacrifice route and shut the whole thing down for fear of where it might lead.
MOST people would go "holy shit this is awesome" and laugh about it.
so yes he's just a random guy.
do you remember "hotornot"? it was a website launched in 2000 where people uploaded their own photos so that anyone visiting the sight could rate how hot they were, and was probably one of the biggest influences on how facebook and youtube would approach user interaction, in terms of lessons for corporations about how people use social media.
within a couple weeks of launching it was one of the most visited urls in existence. however, there were about a dozen sites that did the exact same thing that launched in the year previous, so why did this one website take off when the others didn't?
myspace already existed when facebook launched, as did at least a dozen other social media sites. why did facebook become what it is and the others are all dead?
a combination of random chance and 'right place right time' exploitation, but there's no quantifiable reason that facebook took off, and its success sure as shit had nothing to do with zuckerberg or anything he ever did.
Some apologists for social media say something along the lines of "Newspapers, liars and gossiping have been around for centuries. FB is the same just scaled up." These reductionists ignore that SCALE can be very important in the real world.
Hope this helps..
i mean it's just the same thing over again - you blaming something inanimate for the behaviors of something with volition.
it's watching the human race run full tilt head first into a wall and then blaming the wall for all the head injuries.