
I recently left Facebook as well, but I was uninterested in any self-congratulatory artwork or dramatic fuck-you to the social platform. I hadn't enjoyed my time on Facebook for a while, but Facebook had been such a large part of my life for nine years. I don't buy most complaints about it "not being real life," or some useless addiction. As the largest social network in the world, Facebook is very much a part of real life; I just hadn't felt like I was benefitting from that part of my life.My vague discontentedness with Facebook finally reached a boiling point in light of their emotional contagion study. The highly controversial academic study was recently published, and it claims that Facebook had secretly manipulated the emotional state of nearly 700,000 of its users. I understood that Facebook's main purpose is to make advertising dollars from its users, but this felt excessively creepy. And as VICE News has already reported, one of the study's researches received funding from the Minerva initiative-helping the Pentagon study and quell social unrest-which made it all the more creepy. Yet I knew Briz would offer some insight beyond the most recent headlines.Briz's personal video-essay and tutorial starts with a neat breakdown of the fundamental reasons he decided to leave Facebook. Briz says: "My issue with Facebook is how they have time and time again demonstrated a lack of respect for their users in the interest of prioritizing other interests, like those of their advertisers." Briz breaks down how these convergent interests have played out into four categories: the filter bubble, recycled Likes, sponsored stories, and experimenting on users.
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