Has the Social Network Exodus Begun?
It's official: Michael Bailey is off MySpace and Facebook.
If you don't know Michael personally, you've probably never been to a social media function. I've known Michael to pop up at PodCamps from Boston to Pittsburgh, and at VON in San Jose and PME in SoCal -- all from his homebase in Missouri. For quite awhile, Michael has been one of the few active cross-coast socializers originating from the Midwest.
And he just admitted today that it's mostly bullshit.
Now, granted, Michael has been known to ruffle feathers. Michael is a pot-stirrer, like myself, and is often just as interested in seeing HOW people react as he is in WHAT they actually have to say.
But he brings up a great point, via Twitter:
When you lower the bar of what really matters and what is important, things like social networks crop up like weeds... You all know how to get ahold of me, you have my email address, my cell #, my address. If it matters, reach out, attach yourself.Let's ignore, for the moment, the fact that not EVERY interaction requires a phone call or an email. (Michael himself would admit that.) The bigger question is:
What PURPOSE Do Social Networks Serve in our Daily Lives?
I myself never use MySpace for personal communication anymore. When I started blogging and Twittering, MySpace lost out in the time sink.
I've also not bothered to join Facebook. Surprisingly, I'm still alive, healthy and getting work.
LinkedIN? The most it's done for me is pepper my inbox with arbitrary questions from people I barely know, about job openings or tech issues. No real traction there.
Pownce? Never bothered.
Delicious? Haven't used it in years.
What Michael (and I) seems to be saying is: the signal-to-noise ratio (god, I love Web 2.0 buzzwords; perhaps they'll someday have a Smithsonian display all their own) is reaching the point of pointlessness.
I've heard many people, myself included, muse about the possibility of deleting their MySpace accounts, now that they've essentially become spam boxes. Perhaps there's a temptation to migrate to Facebook, or whatever else comes next.
But, for people like Michael, perhaps Seth Porges is right -- perhaps social networking is a trend that's about to end.
Do YOU still need YOUR MySpace account?
(Side note: In the earlier days of Twitter, when the system was even buggier [if that's possible], there was a massive one-day defection to Jaiku. It was led by Chris Brogan and Robert Scoble, two of the most influential social media voices. And, of course, when Twitter came back, so did everyone else.
Had they stayed gone, what would have happened to Twitter?
Michael Bailey isn't as much of an inciter as Scoble or Brogan, but his point is much more valid. I'm interested to see if there's a tipping point here, and how close Michael comes to it.)
** UPDATE (8:27 PM Oct 3rd): I just canceled my MySpace account as well. Odd, how a service I once spent so much time on is now something I avoid at all costs. Granted, when I started on MySpace (in 2004), I was single and the service was new -- two great hooks to occupy my time. But now, I have so many other ways to keep up with people, I just don't NEED MySpace.
I still have an STBD account there, though. Why? Because that's the only way some people watch our show, so as long as there's an STBD, there might as well be an STBD MySpace...
Labels: chrisbrogan, exodus, facebook, influence, jaiku, michaelbailey, mobasoft, myspace, robertscoble, sethporges, social media, social networking, society, sociology, tipping point, trend, twitter