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Facebook decides harassing members isn't a good idea

Posted Nov 30 2007, 07:13 AM by Kim Peterson
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Social networking site Facebook is finally backing away from its overly aggressive and ill-conceived advertising strategy. To understand how maddening this ad push was, consider what happened to Forrester analyst Charlene Li. As she explains on her blog, she recently bought a coffee table on Overstock.com. Then she logged into Facebook and saw this on her page:

 

She used her personal e-mail address to buy the table and had no idea the purchase would show up on her Facebook news feed for all her friends and work contacts to see.

Another Facebook member logged on to see that his girlfriend bought an item he asked for on his Christmas list. Oops. Others saw their movie ticket purchases on Fandango become public knowledge.

More than 50,000 members have protested the system, called Beacon, by signing a petition created by MoveOn.org. Facebook finally gave in yesterday. Now, it will get user approval each time before posting data collected from Beacon. There's no way for a Facebook user to opt out completely and avoid the system altogether. You can read Facebook's Beacon FAQ here.

Facebook expressed its regrets in an online posting:

"We're sorry if we spoiled some of your holiday gift-giving plans. We are really trying to provide you with new meaningful ways, like Beacon, to help you connect and share information with your friends." 

No, what Facebook's really trying to do is sell a lot of advertising. And it discovered there was a line it cannot cross, even for the many users in their teens and '20s who are far more relaxed about online privacy than earlier generations.

All of this makes me wonder about Microsoft's decision to pay Facebook $240 million for a 1.6% stake. That investment placed Facebook's value at $15 billion. Screwups like these don't happen with $15 billion companies. Note that no other company has invested in Facebook since, at least not publicly. Did Microsoft get punked?

In any case, Beacon was an idiotic move, and it'll be quite some time before Facebook can toy with its members like this again. 

Comments

 

HOW FUNNY IS THIS!

KINDA SCARY TOO!

They should be shut down before tey do a lot of real damage

Does Beacon show Wal-Mart sales data?  

Wal-Mart is famous for never sharing sales data with any vendor (until the news item this month that they shared with Billboard to show the WMT-exclusive Eagles CD totally nuking the rest of the pop music landscape).  That was a sales-data-sharing news story.  This... not so much.

So, does Facebook/Beacon get Wal-Mart or Wal-Mart.com sales data?  That would be newsworthy, and frankly, extremely valuable marketing data, especially if Facebook's Beacon service can extract this without Wal-Mart's consent/participation.

Also, talking about big-cap companies making mistakes... today's mistake is not so bad, really:

en.wikipedia.org/.../Bhopal_disaster

Everyone's talking about Facebook sacrificing customer service, but everyone seems to forget that it's FREE and you're not required to use it.  If you don't like it, leave.

How large a company was Enron before it imploded.

Everyone's looking for an edge in the ultra-satrurated advertising industry.  At least credit the ad execs at Facebook for coming up with an original idea.

This website is just another smoke and mirror trick by the neocon corporate machine to get the youth of america to give up thier privacy and rights and facilitate the coming fascist state. Wake up idiots before it's too late. I heard the CIA has taken a great interest in facebook.

I dont care either way. I dont use it. so whatever. It sucks that there sharing the info with everyone on there.

Any company who abuses its customers will eventually be erased.  There are too many good companies that focus on customer service that are ready to jump in and take their place.

I remember a store that used to make you pull a ticket, then wait in line to pay, then wait in line again to recieve the item.  Another company used to service charge for this and service charge for that.  Finally, the music industry who over charges and then restricts usage then harasses and abuses its customers.

Thank goodness for competition.  The first two company are gone and the music industry is being replaced by technology.  They abused both customers and muscians.

I guess I'm a bit lost here as I don't use Facebook or MySpace.  What I'm wondering is why in the world does everyone need to know you purchased a coffee table from The Pottery or a tickets to an event?  Since when does that have to be news to the world?

These sites seem to be more trouble than of any use unless you're trying to promote a band.

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