Ryan Sloan

I don't care what it symbolizes, I'll always refer to that sculpture outside...

Facebook’s latest move to show Twitter who’s boss

with 2 comments

(Or some similarly long and overly dramatic title)

Exciting online news news last week! Facebook launched vanity urls at my favorite price: FREE. (I think there was also a new mobile phone launch or two, I think. Who knows?) Facebook users all over the world anxiously awaited the 12:01am landgrab, refreshing facebook.com/username/ until that magic text box appeared. I opted for facebook.com/ryansloan, but there were some more interesting choices. There was talk earlier this year about the possibility of Facebook monetizing vanity urls, but they opted for the free option instead. Benevolence? Hardly. Granted, they potentially passed up millions of real dollars when they decided to grant them to users free of charge, but I think Zuckerberg & Co. are just looking to the future. No, not the impending robot apocalypse, but a race with Twitter.
Everyone remembers the rumors of an acquisiton deal by Facebook, but it ultimately fell through. Shortly after that, Facebook announced more changes to the home page — they were moving to a live-feed format similar to Twitter. As usual, it was met with some resistance from the user base (surprise surprise) who felt that Facebook should stop “trying to be like Twitter,” and at that point that’s exactly how things seemed: Facebook was trying to be a cheap imitation Twitter with Photos ‘n Stuff ™. Their next move cleared things up a bit: vanity URLs. Vanity URLs enable access to any user’s profile without jumping through all kinds of search-hoops. As of now, if a non-friend visits your vanity URL they are just taken to your summary page. That was expected, after all, Twitter and Facebook have models of “friendship” that are fundamentally different. Twitter’s model is more open, whereas Facebook friendship is a two-way street. I think this is part of the reason that people have reacted so negatively to Facebook’s “imitation Twitter.” Assuming Facebook didn’t alter that model, then Twitter and Facebook could continue to exist as two similar services with different audiences.
The next phase makes the game much more interesting: real-time search of public posts. No longer are you limited to searching your friends, but everyone who chooses to make their status updates public. This brought Facebook into the real-time news ecosystem — one that was previously dominated by Twitter. But that’s not all! Word on the street is, Facebook is ready to make some changes to their privacy system, enabling users to choose privacy settings for each individual item they post. Assuming the interface isn’t a total pain, this is particularly interesting when applied to status updates. If you can make your status updates visible to (and searchable by!) everyone, then the playing field changes dramatically. Combine that with the vanity urls for easy access, and you have more than a “cheap imitation Twitter,” you have the functionality of Twitter (followers, live “news” stream, updates via web, mobile, etc.) with the features, API, and (possibly most importantly) user base of Facebook. Two of the common questions from people reluctant to adopt Twitter are “why would I need a Twitter? Who would follow me anyway?” Given that everyone and their mother (yes, that includes my mother) already has a Facebook, the argument becomes moot. If the users are already signed up, it can’t hurt to give it a shot. Who knows, you might like it.
So is this the end of Twitter? Probably not (not yet, at least) but the game has become much more interesting. Twitter’s recieved some great press lately, but is that enough to save them from their performance and scalability problems? More importantly: Facebook has monetized their product (albeit not very well.) Twitter, on the other hand, has yet to name their price. In the end, cash flow could be an important factor.
Either way, Twitter and Facebook get to share the spotlight for a little while, but can there be only one? What do you think? Is Facebook going after Twitter? Should we seek some sort of consolidated solution, or can the two services live together in harmony?

Written by Ryan

June 17th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

Posted in News

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2 Responses to 'Facebook’s latest move to show Twitter who’s boss'

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  1. This is going to be a fascinating run off– I believe it will have the intensity of the MySpace/Facebook showdowm but with very dissimilar results; in that confrontation, the two rivals were misunderstood as symmetric services and direct competitors. Twitter and Facebook though offer quite different environments, but, as you mentioned, Facebook already has a mini-twitter embedded in the form of the updated status stream (goodbye, wall, rest in peace), so it is not much of a stretch to see Facebook absorbing a lot of status traffic from existing users. Twitter, though, has very limited features compared to Facebook and so would struggle to gain territory against Facebook and it’s well established user base.
    Because of this flexibility that Facebook has to perform a role similar to Twitter AND MORE, I would put my money behind Facebook. I don’t see the two services living in harmony because in a time of rapid information source consolidation (iGoogle, RSS feeds, data streams), less means more. But, if Twitter fails to monetize, what would be the point in competing? I assume they already share a substantial user base, so if there is no money and few users to compete over, why should Facebook even bother acquiring Twitter? (That is a legitimate question, I’m pretty uninformed on the business aspect of Web 2.0)

    Nicholas Johnson

    23 Oct 09 at 2:48 am

  2. Here is an article describing a phenomenon called Spymaster that gripped Twitter earlier this year. It brings up some important issues about the control and privacy options (which are currently limited) on Twitter. As the service begins to be used more and more by blogs, news feeds, and applications, the assumption that all users will always want an unrestricted flow of information from their friends breaks down. Also of note is that phenomena like this are essentially exploiting a service not designed with such applications in mind. Of course, many web services start simple and grow as users push new uses, but the question remains if phenomena like this are anecdotal, or will they become the Twitter norm? Will the user base continue to expand the uses of Twitter, and, if so, will the administration respond by implementing new or enhanced privacy controls and upping the robustness of the service so that it can better handle such uses?

    http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/05/29/spy-vs-spy-the-spymaster-backlash-begins-and-twitter-needs-to-fix-it/

    Nicholas Johnson

    29 Oct 09 at 1:07 am

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