As many of you may already be aware, Facebook is now testing
a new option in the United States called “sponsored posts.” For a fee of $7,
you can ensure that your post rides atop your friends’ news feed for an
extended period of time and gets noticed by more people. The feature is already
available in twenty countries and Facebook hopes that it will take off in
America and help bolster the company’s revenue stream.
They believe that the feature will be utilized for birth
announcements, yard sales, or even death notices, since many people already pay
for this service in their local newspapers it seemed like a logical extension
of that model. Of course, there are no real parameters as to what the feature
can be used for, which led me to an interesting question: What could go wrong
with this?
Let’s say that you just emerged from a vicious breakup with
your high school girlfriend and wish to publicly slander her reputation. Sure
you can simply post a status update and hope that enough people haven’t hidden
you from their news feeds, but that’s not good enough for you. You want
results. So you login to your account,
drop $7, and suddenly half the school sees “Suzie is an illiterate skank who is
carrying a member of the chess team’s baby.”
Now I am not condoning this as an admirable use of Facebook
(or $7) but scorned teenagers are rarely accused of exhibiting too much
integrity on the Internet. I also wonder if such a feature could open Facebook
up to cyber-bullying lawsuits since someone with nefarious intent and disposable
income could easily make sure their taunts have a wider audience.
The logical next step is purchasing fabricated “Likes” for
your post. This would create a facade of favoritism amongst your intended
audience without actually needing anyone to agree with you. Before long, you might be able to buy Twitter
followers or drop a few bucks for some non-existent acquaintances to comment on
how fetching you look in your profile photo.
At the very least, it will be an interesting method of
identifying which of your friends are the most narcissistic. Sure we would all
like to believe the only life-changing events would make the cut but before you
know it every political opinion and semi-clever meme will be sitting astride
your feed until the perpetrator’s checking account is overdrawn.
Perhaps they should entertain the notion of a reverse model,
one that actually charges the user a fee if their post is extraordinarily
asinine or includes the term “haters.” Their friends could anonymously vote and
once the tally reaches a pre-determined threshold the owner of the Facebook
account would be billed. This model of intellectual community policing would
most certainly reduce instances of Rickrolling and the fines would double if
you are found guilty of attempting to have a one-on-one conversation by
replying to a group message.
Facebook has an uphill battle by trying to monetize the
world’s greatest advertising database without alienating the people from which
that data originates. Personally, I would suggest a tariff on unsolicited game
invitations or incorrectly attributed quotes but I doubt that idea would gain
any real traction at the home office. Maybe this is truly the beginning of the
end for Facebook or maybe this is simply another change we will all
begrudgingly accept as our new reality, like Timeline or a world with a Hulk
Hogan sex tape. Either way I doubt anyone is reading this since it will be
promoted through an un-sponsored post as my $7 went to Wendy’s before the bacon
shortage wreaks havoc there.
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