The InfoStride Forum

TECHNOLOGY => Computing and Internet => Topic started by: ReadWrite on May 20, 2013, 07:31 AM

Title: Please Don't 'Like' This Post (And I Really Mean It This Time)
Post by: ReadWrite on May 20, 2013, 07:31 AM
(http://readwrite.com/files/styles/800_450sc/public/fields/thumb%20up%20flickr%20djenan%20504845924_5d2d8615ce_b.jpg) Editor's Note: This is the last installment of a 3-part series covering Len Kendall's abstinence from the "Like" button for a month.

If you haven't been following along, in April I decided to commit myself to a simple behavioral experiment (http://readwrite.com/2013/04/17/like-experiment). I pledged to not "like" anything on or off of Facebook for a month, no matter how tempted I was (and believe me, I was tempted often).

My hypothesis was that at the end of this 30 day cycle I would be free of likes and that my detox period would be over. That isn't the case. I still actively have to stop myself often from hitting that button, and it troubles me quite a bit. It was so simple and I did it for so long that it has burned into my internet muscle memory far more severely than I had anticipated.

I've learned several things along the way (http://readwrite.com/2013/04/30/please-dont-like-this-post-either), but when I started this trial I wanted to answer one primary question:

Who exactly is benefitting the most from me hitting the like button?

While this experiment didn't provide me with a direct answer to this question, it did force me to think long and hard about the probable ones. I've concluded that the following parties benefit from those billions (yes billions) of likes each day:

Above are just four benefits yielded from "like" behavior. The obvious problem is that only 25% of the these items are benefitting me. And that's being generous since I didn't list off countless other beneficiaries. Call me selfish, but the ROI of the like button isn't high enough for me to continue using it. Therefore, I plan to continue abstaining from it.

Although I started this experiment around a single element of Facebook, it's led me to question the value of the many services the social network provides. Facebook has in many ways become the "big box" store of the internet. And while I do shop at such places in real life for certain commodity items, I don't really want to go there for all my many specialty needs. I don't want to speak for anyone else, but I personally don't want a big-box internet experience. For me, the web is about discovery, being bombarded with choice, and finding niche experts.

Refraining from likes has been a trivial experiment. I know that there are far more important behavioral issues online worth exploring (cyber bullying, crowdfunding, and citizen journalism just to name a few), but I hope that this small example of personal reflection on digital habits encourages you to do the same. Think about how you're spending time on the internet, who its benefitting, and what's worth testing in your own digital world.

And don't like this post. I really mean it this time.

Lead image via Flickr user Djenan (http://www.flickr.com/photos/djenan/504845924/), CC 2.0

ReadWrite