Michael H Goldhaber on Tue, 8 Dec 2009 03:09:14 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Handoko Suwono: Facebook paves its way to IPO |
Heiko, et al. I have only read the American version of Facebook's terms of service, but my interpretation of it does not accord with what you say below. In fact it is rather explicit that each user retains copyright, etc., except that it allows Facebook the right to use it for their own service, which is to put your words up on your "friends' " Face3book sites. This is far more ownership left to users than in the case of many companies who allow on-line comments, but take ownership in them,, or allow submission of letters to the editor, or contest entries, etc., but take exclusive ownership in them, leaving the originator with no rights at all. Further, users or consumers of many kinds of products and services perform actions that help the companies increase their sales. Whether you are wearing a warm sweater, a smart necktie, using an attractive or smoothly writing fountain pen, talking on a smart phone, offering your friends a beer of a certain brand, you are helping boost sales.of that sort of item, and maybe of that brand. I could multiply such eamples ad nauseum. My position is not that Facebook is a a particularly idealistic company, but that I don't see why it is being singled out by the left, when it does nothing terribly unusual. Christian Fuchs, who teaches at the Universtiy of Salzburg, has even gone so far as to claim that since Facebook may extract "surplus value" from our "unpaid labor" it is therefore "infintely exploitative" in Marxian terms. He has compared it to Nazi slave labor, even. This is just nonsense, at best, and nothing more. The vast majority of Facebook users presumably feel they are getting something in return for whatever they are giving up, even when told that Facebook my try to sell their info. In addition some I know of have used Facebook for progressive political organizing that they could hardly have achieved without it. Why single this co. out for such excessive critiques? I am afraid the fact speaks to a kind of poverty of thought on the left. (note: I will reply in a separate message ot some other comments) Best, Michael On Dec 6, 2009, at 12:09 AM, Heiko Recktenwald wrote: > Telephone companies would not own the content. > > You may be able to delete things, not really shure, whether this is > possible today, but you own nothing. > > They can delete you without notice. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org