Millions Of Users Unaware That Facebook Is On The Internet -- Or Think It *Is* The Internet
from the that's-what-I-call-a-gatekeeper dept
Facebook figures often enough on Techdirt, and most people here know what they are getting and giving when they sign up. But according to a fascinating article on qz.com, that's not true for everyone around the world who uses Facebook:It was in Indonesia three years ago that Helani Galpaya first noticed the anomaly.Nor are Indonesian users alone in this view:
Indonesians surveyed by Galpaya told her that they didn't use the internet. But in focus groups, they would talk enthusiastically about how much time they spent on Facebook. Galpaya, a researcher (and now CEO) with LIRNEasia, a think tank, called Rohan Samarajiva, her boss at the time, to tell him what she had discovered. "It seemed that in their minds, the Internet did not exist; only Facebook," he concluded.
In Africa, Christoph Stork stumbled upon something similar. Looking at results from a survey on communications use for Research ICT Africa, Stork found what looked like an error. The number of people who had responded saying they used Facebook was much higher than those who said they used the internet. The discrepancy accounted for some 3% to 4% of mobile phone users, he says.The rest of the article goes on to present more evidence that many people are unaware that Facebook is on the Internet, or believe that Facebook is the Internet, and to explore the consequences. For example, one survey shows that 56% of Indonesians who use Facebook but say they don't use the Internet never follow links out of Facebook, against 25% who are on Facebook but say they also use the Internet; for Nigeria, the figures are 69% and 21% respectively. That confirms the immense power of Facebook to act as a gatekeeper -- to people online, to information, and to the lucrative advertising that powers most of the Web.
Although you can hardly blame Facebook for people's misunderstanding of how the Internet works when they use the social network, one major project from the company is likely to make things worse. Here's what the significantly-named Internet.org app hopes to achieve:
Over 85% of the world’s population lives in areas with existing cellular coverage, yet only about 30% of the total population accesses the internet. Affordability and awareness are significant barriers to internet adoption for many and today we are introducing the Internet.org app to make the internet accessible to more people by providing a set of free basic services.The aim here is to provide low-cost access to the Internet for those who might not otherwise be able to afford it. In fact, Internet.org goes further: it provides totally free access to the Internet -- or rather, free access to a very small list of pre-selected sites, including, of course, Facebook.
With this app, people can browse a set of useful health, employment and local information services without data charges. By providing free basic services via the app, we hope to bring more people online and help them discover valuable services they might not have otherwise.
The intention is laudable, but Internet.org is a classic demonstration of why we need net neutrality. Providing free services may look great in principle, but effectively discriminates against everything not on the list, especially startups with limited resources. We certainly need to work on providing very low-cost Internet access to everyone who wants it, but not by creating a set of privileged services. One other risk with Facebook's Internet.org app is that it will probably encourage yet more people to think that those free services are not on the Internet, or that they are Internet -- all of it.
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Filed Under: internet, walled gardens
Companies: facebook
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Yeah and it pays Mike to shill for them. WHY U NO DEBATE ME MIKE? - Techdirt troll and honorable MAFIAA shill
*facepalm* - The rest of us
Now you stop diluting my trademark. *sues* - Facebook
What am I witnessing? - Tim
Ahem. Instead of offering such services why not raise awareness to the fact that the Internet is much, much more thanmere applications in a smartphone?
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Because many people, including many otherwise technically inclined people, are notoriously susceptible to tunnel vision. If it's not in their specific area of expertise, they don't want to hear about it and dismiss it as irrelevant, extraneous, needless complexity.
Darwin in action. In earlier times, this would have been a potentially fatal mode of operation, kind of like not believing in vaccination. Our modern civilization encourages people to remain ignorant of things outside their specialty. They're more easily dealt with as a herd that way.
This story surprises me not at all. I've been saying for a long time that the most clueless, with respect to computing in general, are the legal and medical professions, two of the most highly educated demographics we have.
Throw enough extraneous minutia at people and they will go out of their way to avoid having to deal with any more, even if it might save their lives to know it.
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tl;dr
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They like their tunnels very... tunnely.
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Hey the shills don't talk like that. That's how a foreigner talks and the only reason they talk like that is because they are portraying their native language onto English. It's not due to incompetence. It's perfectly understandable, at least until they gain more familiarity with the language. Anyone new to a language will make similar mistakes.
The shills around here make the kind of mistakes that indicate they are illiterate and incoherent. English is their only language but they can't even speak it well. They don't have another language to portray onto English that results in mistakes. Their speech and reading comprehension capabilities are more akin to someone who has started learning their very first and only language at a much older age.
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What is it now, instagram and snapchat?
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shieeet
These indians are funny, this line is the most hilarious thing i seen today.
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In this context, I can definitely see some phone users saying they only use Facebook and not the internet. I can only imagine some exec for Big Telecom shivering with delight at the thought of customers saying such things. One step closer to a tiered internet where people are paying for the application and not the access.
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A 3rd employee going the other way overhears some of the conversation. She stops them and asks the colleague, "My sister's Internet went down last night. Was that because of you?"
No joke, she was serious.
That and some people take Facebook as *news*.
Sad.
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Not really any different
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Re: Not really any different
Internet = Series of tubes
Web = Spun by the Hitmill spiders that live in the tubes.
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Something to consider...
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Re: Something to consider...
True, and that irritates me tremendously. That's even worse than when Microsoft misnamed its browser "Internet Explorer", which bothered me at the time because there's vast swaths of the internet that can't be "explored" with a browser.
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Yes, but even so, they can't explore the entire internet.
"the flaw in the article is based on the assumption that there is only one meaning for the word "Internet""
I don't think that's a flaw -- there really is only one one meaning for the word "internet". It's a proper noun.
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None of this is new
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4MwTvtyrUQ
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Re: None of this is new
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Re: None of this is new
The Web : national highway system
Web Browser : your automobile
Search Engine : road atlas, GPS device or information kiosk
AOL or Facebook : bus tour operator ?
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Re: Re: None of this is new
Very good.
Nah. Roadside theme parks. Paul Bunyan and Blue statues, or fifty foot statue of Hey Zeus Crisco at the entrance (not Disneyland).
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ummm
All in all, I think they're digging a bit too deep. If someone asked me "do you use the Internet", I may answer "Only Facebook". Kind of a "yes, but not really".
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which generation?
>>generation's AOL.
According to my 12 and 15 year old, Facebook is now basically for old people.
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back in the hay day of AOL
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Re: back in the hay day of AOL
Heh, I know someone (not gonna name names here, but it's not my Mom) that STILL feels the need to fire up AOL to access the internet - across a broadband connection no less.
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This is not the case.
The internet is a large set of private networks that are themselves networked together. The linkages by which they are networked together is the internet infrastructure. Many of those linkages are not public data lines (which is actually a pretty vague term, but in this case, it doesn't matter exactly what you mean).
It is entirely possible to transmit a packet of data over the internet without that data ever touching a public data line in any sense of the phrase.
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One side doesnt realise their using the internet
The otherside doesnt realise the otherside doesnt realise their using the internet
Both sides coming from two totally different perpectives, neither one realising it, unless specifically called attention too...........actually, thinking about it, that probably happens alot, assumptions being made, and no obvious indications to question those assumptions, again, unless s...........where was i :)
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I know what you mean........i mean it would be great if the internet was free, so that EVERYBODY can join in if they choose, but then you would ACTUALLY have to include the WHOLE internet, and thats never likely to happen
Also, this thing could be misused by those that realise theres a platform they could manipulate that has millions of users, who might not go outside the boundary of free in order to find information not permitted
Anyway, getting beyond myself here, i reserve my judgement until i see such evidence
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How did I ever get things so wrong?
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Did you know the world wide web is not the internet?
Before facebook was the internet, people believed it was Google.
Before that, Yahoo.
Before that, the web.
Before that, usenet.
And heck, once upon a time, AOL was its own network like Compuserve that HAD an internet gateway.
Man, I'm old.
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Re: Did you know the world wide web is not the internet?
Hell, for that matter, I remember when AOL didn't exist and everyone had to buy their own coasters.
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Re: Re: Did you know the world wide web is not the internet?
You *bought* coasters? When I was younger we had to go out into the forest and just hope we found a really flat rock.
(I also remember when we had to use * and _ for emphasis. Kids these days with their "bold" and their "italics"...)
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Re: Re: Re: Did you know the world wide web is not the internet?
When we etched our stone slates we had one, ONE box of movable type, and once you used your five asterisks that was it until the next go around.
And mail was delivered by pony. And wireless meant you didn't have to pay the transatlantic surcharge.
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Indeed AOL had many subscribers, but most everyone I knew avoided it like the plague. And for reasons too numerous to list.
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Now it's just called Facebook...
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But beyond FB and localizing the issue anywhere, I am constantly confounded by the complete inability to do simple things as is displayed by the purportedly tech-savvy generations who never even knew a world without internet.
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Not long ago a guy comes to our offce and says: "I don't have the Internet". When my coworker asks him to be a little more specific ("So, you don't have a connection?") the guy just repeatedly says he "just can't access it".
It turned out he accidentally deleted the internet explorer icon from his desktop...
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well, at least you can see your friend picture and retweet their tweet.
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This story is not true
The Hobbit Got A Kid Suspended: 6 BS Stories That Went Viral
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