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Facebook Now Dead

A System That Isn't Working

By Sudais ZakwanPublished about 6 hours ago 3 min read

Or at least it feels like it's dead, doesn’t it?

Any system that is not maintained and improved but simply left to its own devices, will enter a stage of entropy (natural, slow decay, degradation, and dilapidation) and eventually die.

Systems do not decay randomly. They decay along the fault lines and break at the weak links built into their design. If profit becomes the primary organizing principle, everything else -- community, truth, connection -- eventually is sacrificed.

It may look as if it is still alive because some of its elements continue working by inertia, but overall, Facebook is largely dead on the inside.

When I was young, I read many short stories by Guy de Maupassant and was struck by his obsession with the macabre, with death, and with what happens after it. One detail was particularly memorable: when describing how men died and how people mourned them, Maupassant often inserted the detail of a corpse growing a beard overnight — as if it were the last burst of life in a dead body. It is scientifically incorrect; the beard does not grow after death. Rather, stubble may appear more pronounced because the skin dehydrates and the tissue shrinks. But at the time, it was a common misconception — and it stayed with me as a powerful metaphor.

To me, it feels as though Facebook is currently growing a beard after it has died.

It no longer serves its primary original purpose: connecting people who otherwise cannot stay in touch.

The architecture is still there, i.e. profiles, friends lists, Facebook groups, timelines, but the organizing logic has changed. What once prioritized relationships now prioritizes retention and engagement with paid content.

It no longer serves it's second function either, to inform people about what is going on in the world, because it circulates so much false and misleading information that people struggle to find the truth and retreat into their comfortable and safe information bubbles.

It does not even truly entertain. The reels we all watch simply gobble up our time without delivering the dopamine hit we expect.

All of this is happening because Facebook has been left to run on its own algorithm. The algorithm that believes it knows its users and feeds them more of the same content they already consume. But more of the same is never enough. So we stay hooked, hoping for something new and exciting while quietly burning away our time.

And the ads! I estimate that on any given day, I see five to seven ads, both open and covert, before I reach a friend’s post or a news organization I follow. Even if I block the ads (which takes time and effort because they are relentless and never disappear with just one click as FB also asks why you are blocking them, allegedly to “train” the algorithm to serve you better content), many more pop up in my feed.

Of course, this is not accidental. The platform is not built to reduce friction and my frustration as a consumer; it is built to monetize my attention, and friction is simply the cost I as a user am expected to absorb.

Have you ever tried buying something off Facebook? First, you run the risk of purchasing from charlatans, con artists, or scammers because Facebook refuses to take responsibility for verifying the legitimacy of ads. Second, when you buy something you genuinely like, the algorithm floods you with ads for the same product from other companies. How many garden trimmers and rain barrel kits do you think I really need, Facebook?

As an author, the most frustrating part is that Facebook hides my posts containing links to Vocal, even from my friends, because it does not want users clicking external links and leaving the platform.

In other words, the system rewards enclosure. It favors content that keeps users inside its walls and quietly penalizes anything that suggests there is a world beyond it.

I know you can do it if you put in the effort and listen to your users. It is all about genuine truth-based content, engagement, and community.

Remember how you started back in 2005?

We desperately need that Facebook back.

social mediahumanity

About the Creator

Sudais Zakwan

Sudais Zakwan – Storyteller of Emotions

Sudais Zakwan is a passionate story writer known for crafting emotionally rich and thought-provoking stories that resonate with readers of all ages. With a unique voice and creative flair.

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