For years the transgressions have been piling up.  Privacy breaches.  Data mining exposés.  Obvious violations of trust.  Denial used as a battle weapon.  Hollow apologies. Despite all this, most Facebook users have not yet felt concerned enough to leave the platform.  

Mr. Z. tesifies before Congress regarding the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Image credit: Xinhua

Is the sense of staying updated with friends and family too strong?  Or is it free access to those deeply poignant, irresistably charming, or emotionally moving posts?  For many, Facebook has become too central to daily life to just let go.  

But maybe – just maybe– we’ve reached the last straw.  Could a major exodus from Facebook finally transpire? The facts have piled up.  The evidence is compelling. Has the time come to impeach Facebook?

Many years ago in a meeting with peer executives, I was discussing social media and how it might affect our organizations.  Facebook had emerged, and we thought it might be worth trying.  We made the CEO equivalent of a pinky promise and agreed to set up FB accounts.  Back then, few of us had spent much time on social media.

We became each others’ first Facebook friends.  From there we took different paths.  Some became regular users.  Some dove into other social media platforms.  We didn’t know it, but we were part of the exponential growth that brought Facebook into everyone’s lives – and brought billions into Mr. Zuckerberg’s pockets.

I never got hooked.  Never developed the habit of logging in and cycling through a string of posts, despite the attraction of a “feed” that always threw choice entertaining morsels my way.  Personal posts seemed hollow compared to meeting in person – and those brief exchanges may have even reduced the likelihood of spending real time together. If Facebook was an implant, my psyche rejected it.  I just stopped going there.

Which made me an outlier. I’m often the last to know what’s going on.  (I know, cluelessness plays in here, too!)  When well-meaning friends and allies can’t simply refer me to their Facebook page for updates, it’s as if I disappeared.  When a group uses Facebook instead of building an actual website, I miss out on what they are doing.  

This information gap has been an inconvenience, not a real problem.  But it’s fascinating how people treat outsiders to a predominant medium. Some kind souls go out of their way to email me info from important posts.  Many just shrug: there’s no cure for willful ignorance.  A few reveal a guilty grin, admitting they wished they could get off Facebook.

Evangelism isn’t my thing. I haven’t eaten meat for 40 years, but haven’t converted anyone to vegetarianism.  I care deeply about the climate, but guilt-tripping people who drive everywhere does nothing for me – and probably doesn’t help the climate either. 

But I’m not shy about taking a stand.

While Facebook undoubtedly offers a certain fun and connectivity, I see it giving little to actual friendships, eroding healthy attention spans, and often supplanting actual reading, thinking and genuine discourse. It sells personal data from within the mirage of community.  It employs “narrowcasting,” the phenomenon of feeding people what they want to hear, thus turbocharging social polarization.  It thrives on labeling, name calling, and extremism.  Facebook also buys emerging competitors, stifling choice while expanding its empire.

Social media that is free to the user turns users themselves into the product that social media empires sell.  Users swap their marketable data for access to cat videos and other entertainments.  

These concerns made me a Facebook abstainer… but not an antagonist.

Now, a more compelling reason to impeach Facebook has arisen: Facebook as a menace to democracy.  On one hand we have its CEO singling out a leading presidential contender and Facebook critic as a threat. On the other hand we have Facebook’s new policy embracing fact-free ads.  

While the much-maligned “mainstream media” are finally saying that they’ve had enough and are refusing to air obvious falsehoods, Facebook shrugs.  Meanwhile, candidate Warren, who for all her flaws is speaking out against monopolies and disinformation, has got Zuckerberg’s boxers in a knot.

Would you trust this guy with your privacy? Oh… you already do.

Here’s what Mr. Z. said about the threat he perceived:

You have someone like Elizabeth Warren who thinks that the right answer is to break up the companies … if she gets elected president, then I would bet that we will have a legal challenge…  at the end of the day, if someone’s going to try to threaten something that existential, you go to the mat and you fight.”

Well, Mr. Z., the existential threat to your business is that it purports to connect people while exploiting them.  People will put up with a lot of exploitation before they decide they’ve had enough.  But given recent events surrounding your money machine of exploitation and data mining, I hope the time people stop supporting your empire has arrived. 

Image credit: New York Times

A Charlie Warzel essay called “Could Facebook Actually Nuke Elizabeth Warren’s Campaign?” unfolds Facebook’s decision to weaken their “Misleading or False Content” rules.  Beyond becoming weaker, he notes, they also now exempt political ads from any accountability to the truth whatsoever. 

Apparently, yelling “Fire!” in a crowded theatre fits into Facebook’s definition of free speech. 

Facebook’s willingness to advance lies undermines the First Amendment.  Further, Warzel describes how social media best serves extreme stances that draw outsized attention.   The very nature of Facebook, he asserts, degrades political discourse:  “With its algorithmic mandate of engagement over all else, Facebook has redefined what it means to be a good candidate — and provided a distinct natural advantage to those who distort the truth and seek to divide.”

Immediately following Facebook’s policy change, the US president increased his Facebook ad budget to $1.5 million per week.  Less truth: More revenue for FB!

While truth may hinder Facebook’s profits, polarization feeds them.  The problem isn’t unique to America.  Phillipine president Rodrigo Duterte uses Facebook to great success. Duterte systematically fired up enough voters with false information and memes triggering fear and anger to propel himself into the presidency.  After his election, Facebook became a tool for harassing his critics. Democracy suffers under Facebook everywhere Facebook reaches (everywhere).

Why might people who know all this remain Facebook users?   We tend to tell ourselves that “others might be swayed, but not me.”   But that view is naïve.  We congratulate ourselves on our capacity to resist manipulation. But have you ever found yourself spending more time on Facebook than you’d really planned to?  Influencing users IS Facebook’s business model.  And it works.

Psychologists have proven that intermittent reinforcement prolongs involvement.  Purchasing lottery tickets is an an example.  The game is calculated to produce small rewards with just enough frequency to keep people buying tickets, always in hope of the big win… despite vanishingly slim chances.  

Similarly, Facebook inserts attention-grabbing bits crafted to maximize the duration of your attention. Warzel calls this the “algorithmic mandate.”  The more time you spend on Facebook, the more Facebook wins, since like television in its day, FB earns revenue based on how many eyeballs view its ad content. And the more time you spend, the better the algorithm gets to know you.

Simply Ear-re-SISTABLE!!!!

Jaron Lanier, in his book Ten Arguments for Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Right Now,  puts it this way: “The algorithm is trying to capture the perfect parameters for manipulating a brain, while the brain, in order to seek out deeper meaning, is changing in response to the algorithm’s experiments… Because the stimuli from the algorithm doesn’t mean anything, because they genuinely are random, the brain isn’t responding to anything real, but to a fiction. That process – of becoming hooked on an elusive mirage – is addiction.”

Amplifying Facebook addiction is the network effect.  A network only works if everyone (or nearly everyone) is hooked into it.  Being an outlier, I’m very conscious of the powerful ingroup-outgroup nature of Facebook. The network effect also reinforces Facebook’s market dominance and tends to suppress any competition that might arise.  When I’ve suggested that people quit Facebook, they tend to say “But then what?” The network effect works.

According to Lanier, the way social media influences politics is biased, “not towards the left or right, but downwards.”  On a platform where stimulating emotional response is the goal and negative emotions are easier to trigger, it makes sense that social media would precipitate anger, sadness, and isolation.

Could Facebook’s problems be fixed?  Is Facebook accountable to anyone?

In a court decision last summer, Facebook was hit with a $5 billion penalty for privacy violations.  This settlement grew out of the Cambridge Analytica scam in which 87 million FB user accounts were scraped for data on their likes, preferences, and “psychographic” profiles.  Why?  To better target users in advertisements. 

Five billion dollars buys a lot of cappuccino.  But the fine was expected to be much larger. Regulators from the FTC were limited in what they could do, partly because strong privacy statutes are lacking, and partly because the entire FTC budget is less than half of one percent of Facebook’s $55 billion revenue.  Along with keeping the fine modest (keep in mind that FB has a long history of privacy violations) Facebook successfully pre-empted any accountability of the executives who define the corporate ethos of selling, not protecting, privacy. After the fine was announced, Facebook’s stock price soared. Does that hint that the penalty will result in change?

One of Facbook’s data centers, slated for major expansion.

Generally, it’s all about money.  But the Cambridge Analytica scheme was driven in part by a calculated strategy for political manipulation.  Remember, Cambridge Analytica wasn’t selling deodorant.  They were closely linked to extreme-right political operatives, including the advocates for Brexit, Senator Ted Cruz, and later, the Donald Trump campaign.

Which brings us back to Zuckerberg vs. the Common Good: The Case for Impeaching Facebook.  

There are no meaningful limits on a company that wields so much economic and social power.   

A clear pattern of lies and betrayal has characterized Facebook’s history.

This platform may well have swayed the 2016 election to Trump.  It very likely may undermine American voters’ ability to genuinely select their next president.

What can one do?  The only thing Facebook has to sell is its users.  Stop being one.  Impeach Facebook from your life. 

Power never yields on its own.  And Mr. Z. is nothing if not powerful.  He will fight.  

Where will you stand in that battle?

Your comments would be very welcome!

Note:  As this post was going to press, Mark Zuckerberg gave a talk at Georgetown University, in which he vigorously defended fact-free free speech, even making reference to such leaders as Martin Luther King, Jr. and Frederick Douglass.  It is hard to see how citing figures far more ethical and righteous than himself will elevate Zuck’s greed-driven agenda.  But who knows?  There are quite a lot of unquestioning Facebook users out there…