I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t). [www.nytimes.com]
Why Joe Public has more power than Jacinda Ardern when it comes to getting Mark Zuckerberg to change [www.interest.co.nz]
Facebook crumbles around its lonely king [www.marketwatch.com]
Facebook privacy pivot raises safety concerns after New Zealand attack [www.businessinsider.com]
Brian Chen: I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t) https://t.co/3sGiDO9IJD
— Andreas Harsono (@andreasharsono) March 22, 2019
I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t). https://t.co/IINI3ifatE
— Eric Scherer (@EricScherer) March 22, 2019
When @bxchen deleted Facebook: "Over the past five months, my online shopping purchases dropped about 43%."
— Gabriel Weinberg (@yegg) March 21, 2019
Counter-intuitive opinion alert: hyper-targeted, a/b tested behavioral ads often cross a line of manipulation that constitutes consumer harm.https://t.co/xWx4DPXLEz
I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t). https://t.co/GNCqiz9CAQ
— Youghourta Benali (@djug) March 22, 2019
Untuk pedoman, baca artikel menarik ini: I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t) https://t.co/5aAkP74tEV
— Socio Geeks (@InsideErick) March 22, 2019
What happens if advertisers can't use your Facebook profile to follow you around the web and target ads to you? @bxchen found out: “You might be too expensive for them to chase.” https://t.co/36DbNf9586
— NYT Business (@nytimesbusiness) March 21, 2019
A life without Facebook? True frieds will always be there. You will have more time for weird / old-fashioned activities such as reading books, and you feel less compelled to irrationally shop online. I can add: more quality time with family and friends. https://t.co/f0QyP5piz0
— Luca Destefanis (@lucadeste) March 23, 2019
Interesting piece in which the writer talks about fewer impulse purchases and reading more books.
— henry porter @The_Convention_ (@HenryCPorter) March 23, 2019
I Deleted Facebook Last Year. Here’s What Changed (and What Didn’t). https://t.co/mxO7eIbG6w
Five months after deleting Facebook, @bxchen reflects on the differences in his life. He didn’t lose touch with any of his true friends — but strange things did occur. https://t.co/7jH2Dbexib
— NYTimes Tech (@nytimestech) March 21, 2019
He dropped Facebook and found that he stayed connected with his closest friends and started reading more books and shopping less online. He doesn't missed those targeted ads, either. https://t.co/MY9Ym2SMtV
— Alan C. Miller (@alanmillerNLP) March 22, 2019
Get off Facebook, it will do you a lot of good.
— I Dissent!!!! (@serrano_rene) March 23, 2019
Facebook is weaponized by political operators to spread lies, deceits and fallacies to serve those who can pay for those evil deeds.https://t.co/B20gppOIoM
"Zuckerberg may end up as a poster child for the concept of the gradual elimination of founder control and dual-class shares, a proposal that some officials at the Securities and Exchange Commission support."https://t.co/n2z7LbInjx
— Gideon Rosenblatt (@gideonro) March 23, 2019
Mark Zuckerberg's big new vision for Facebook could throw oil on its burning safety issues — and he knows it https://t.co/6qkkx1WFbu pic.twitter.com/yJIlexvPgH
— Rich Tehrani (@rtehrani) March 22, 2019