Facebook is celebrating its 11th birthday this week – news that’s likely to make you feel pretty old. As a 28-year-old who signed up for Facebook during the summer before college, it’s hard to imagine a world without it.
We all love Facebook. We all hate Facebook. We all love to hate and hate to love Facebook. Plenty of walks down memory lane could champion the good Facebook’s done in the world – and there’s a lot of it – but I’d like to take a different path.
The following is a thorough but in no way exhaustive look at the times Facebook really Zucked up – most of which led to some truly pissed off users.
What do you think is the biggest blunder Facebook has made in the past few years? Let us know in the comments.
That time Mark Zuckerberg championed free speech but then lol nevermind
Facebook is not, has never been, and will never be a haven for free speech. It doesn’t have to be. It’s a company that survives on advertising revenue. You can’t expect a publicly-traded company that lives and dies (mostly lives as of late) by the ad dollar to take a stand for offensive content. You shouldn’t expect this.
But that’s just what Mark Zuckerberg did in early January following the terrorist attacks on French magazine Charlie Hebdo.
“As I reflect on yesterday’s attack and my own experience with extremism, this is what we all need to reject — a group of extremists trying to silence the voices and opinions of everyone else around the world. I won’t let that happen on Facebook. I’m committed to building a service where you can speak freely without fear of violence,” he wrote in an impassioned note to his 31 million followers.
The time(s) Facebook tried to copy Snapchat
Snapchat has been one of the fastest-growing apps of the past few years, and it was the first to make the idea of ephemeral messaging trendy. Before 2011, most people didn't think they wanted their messages to disappear after the intended recipient read them – but by 2012 Snapchat was all the rage. And so Facebook tried to make their own Snapchat. In an odd rebranding decision, Facebook decided to call their new standalone app "Poke", as in the same name as the widely-derided feature of pre-news feed Facebook (it still exists, by the way) that allowed users to "poke" each other. And then wait to be poked back. And then poke again. And then wait to be poked back... Facebook launched the Poke app in late 2012. It didn't really make a splash, to say the least. In May of 2014, Facebook killed Poke for good, although its death had already happened many months before. RIP Poke. Not content to try and fail to capture Snapchat magic just once, Facebook launched the standalone app Slingshot in the summer of 2014. Slingshot was kind of like Snapchat, but with the interesting caveat of not being able to see what another person sent you until you sent them something back. It didn't go well either. Facebook has tried to keep it on life support by taking it in an entirely different direction, but like fetch, it's just not going to happen.That time Facebook made you download an entirely separate Messenger app because tapping one extra tab was too hard
2014 was the year of the unbundling, with many popular apps splitting up core services once offered inside one, flagship app, and spreading them across multiple standalone apps. Facebook was no different. Apart from Facebook's desperate attempts to capture the Snapchat magic, the company decided to strip its app of one of the most popular features of said app, and force people to download a brand new app to regain its services. So, why did Facebook force another app on you? Here's what Mark Zuckerberg had to say about it:We wanted to do this because we believe that this is a better experience. Messaging is becoming increasingly important. On mobile, each app can only focus on doing one thing well, we think. The primary purpose of the Facebook app is News Feed. Messaging was this behavior people were doing more and more. 10 billion messages are sent per day, but in order to get to it you had to wait for the app to load and go to a separate tab. We saw that the top messaging apps people were using were their own app. These apps that are fast and just focused on messaging. You’re probably messaging people 15 times per day. Having to go into an app and take a bunch of steps to get to messaging is a lot of friction.Messenger is its own app now because tapping your Facebook app and then tapping one more tab to access chat was very, very hard, apparently. There was some backlash, if you can believe that. Don't think that this trend is going to end. You can expect more standalone apps from Facebook in the future.
That time Facebook showed people their dead children in cheery, upbeat "Year in Review"
The road to bad publicity hell is paved with good intentions. And shitty algorithms. This past Christmas, Facebook was forced to issue an apology after its 2014 wrap-up app, called Year in Review, caused some unintended pain for some users who were forced to relive painful events in their lives. One such user was Eric Meyer, whose experience became national news after he penned a blog post about Facebook's Year in Review app juxtaposing images of partying and having a good time with photos of his dead daughter. "Yes, my year looked like that. True enough. My year looked like the now-absent face of my little girl. It was still unkind to remind me so forcefully," he wrote. "And I know, of course, that this is not a deliberate assault. This inadvertent algorithmic cruelty is the result of code that works in the overwhelming majority of cases, reminding people of the awesomeness of their years, showing them selfies at a party or whale spouts from sailing boats or the marina outside their vacation house. But for those of us who lived through the death of loved ones, or spent extended time in the hospital, or were hit by divorce or losing a job or any one of a hundred crises, we might not want another look at this past year." Facebook promised to work on it – you know, for next year's sake.That time Facebook had the slowest goddamn product rollout in history
You know when you were a kid and your dad promised you something but then he forgot about it and you never got it and then you saw that a couple of your friends had it and you were like wtf dad and so he finally gave it to you but when you opened it you saw that it wasn't the new go-kart he promised but was just a bunch of metal parts and an oily wrench so it was pretty much useless so you sulked a bit and waited around and then finally he gave you the whole go-kart but by then you were a teenager and didn't want it anymore? No? Ok. Well, that happened to you. Not exactly that, but Facebook basically did that with the rollout of Graph Search. Facebook unveiled Graph Search after months of speculation in January of 2013, and immediately put everyone on a waiting list. The company warned the rollout would be slow, and man were they not lying. It wasn't until August of 2013 that everyone in the US woke up with Graph Search. But it wasn't the full Graph Search. At the time, users could only search for things people “liked,” (My friends who like Arcade Fire), photos (Photos of me and Chris from 2013) and other basic profile information including location, work info, and more. From day one, Facebook promised that Graph Search would include post search – the ability to search for things like "John Smith's status about beer" – but when Graph Search proper hit all in the US, post search was nowhere to be found. So we waited. And waited. And waited. And then it was spotted in the wild, but only on mobile. Then Facebook said it was testing the feature, which it promised nearly a year prior. It wasn't until December of 2014, nearly two years after Facebook unveiled Graph Search, that Facebook added it iOS. It also added post search to desktop. Android still doesn't have Graph Search.That time Facebook ran a weird emotion experiment on its users without telling them about it
This one really creeped everyone out – mostly due to the fact that it was just plain creepy as hell, but also because it made us all realize that Facebook can have a legitimate effect on our mental state, which is troubling. Or at least that was the hypothesis. Here's what happened, as written in an official scientific paper with the creepy ass title of “Experimental Evidence Of Massive-Scale Emotional Contagion Through Social Networks”.Emotional states can be transferred to others via emotional contagion, leading people to experience the same emotions without their awareness. Emotional contagion is well established in laboratory experiments, with people transferring positive and negative emotions to others. Data from a large real-world social network, collected over a 20-y period suggests that longer-lasting moods (e.g., depression, happiness) can be transferred through networks…although the results are controversial. In an experiment with people who use Facebook, we test whether emotional contagion occurs outside of in-person interaction between individuals by reducing the amount of emotional content in the News Feed. When positive expressions were reduced, people produced fewer positive posts and more negative posts; when negative expressions were reduced, the opposite pattern occurred. These results indicate that emotions expressed by others on Facebook influence our own emotions, constituting experimental evidence for massive-scale contagion via social networks. This work also suggests that, in contrast to prevailing assumptions, in-person interaction and nonverbal cues are not strictly necessary for emotional contagion, and that the observation of others’ positive experiences constitutes a positive experience for people.TL;DR: Facebook wanted to see if it could make you sad by showing you sad stuff and if it could make you happy by showing you happy stuff. Consumer watchdog groups called it "unethical", regulators opened probes, and users expressed their outrage at the experiment ... on Facebook. And everyone kept using Facebook because Facebook's gonna Facebook and that's life. It was just poor communication anyway.