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US Users Are Leaving Facebook by the Millions, Research Says (marketplace.org) 174

An anonymous reader shares a report: All the bad press about Facebook might be catching up to the company. New numbers from Edison Research show an an estimated 15 million fewer users in the United States compared to 2017. The biggest drop is in the very desirable 12- to 34-year-old group. Marketplace Tech got a first look at Edison's latest social media research. It revealed almost 80 percent of people in the U.S. are posting, tweeting or snapping, but fewer are going to Facebook.
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US Users Are Leaving Facebook by the Millions, Research Says

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  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:35PM (#58232062)

    It's the only way to be sure.

    Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter.. All of it.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:36PM (#58232070)

    People still use Facebook?

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:10PM (#58232350)

      People still use Facebook?

      I didn't use Facebook before it was cool to not use Facebook.

      • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @03:55PM (#58233050)

        I deleted Facebook Feb 7 this year. I'm 73 and a retired IT guy.

        I was never cool.

        Until now. I got 17 cool points.

        • Delete it again. it is STILL THERE.

          • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

            I deleted it years back what a hassle, you simply can not trust the fuckers. You so called delete it and after you so called delete it, if you log back in, testing to make sure it is deleted, they fucking reactivate it and it is all fucking there, which means it was never deleted. They only way to delete Facebook factually, is to become politically active, campaign to have Facebook shut down for crimes against humanity, specifically gross global of invasion of human privacy.

            So I supposedly deleted Facebook

    • People still use Facebook?

      Facebook can be very useful - as a garbage container. I use it for writing comments in web sites that require you to register - Facebook makes that straightforward and painless. I am guessing that, by virtue of this fact, those sites send a lot of trash to my Facebook account. I don't really know, as I don't log in to that account. An account that, on the other hand, I created with fake data throughout. By now it probably is nothing but an ever-growing cesspool. Facebook can deal with it.

      • I hope that you realize that Facebook has very likely been able to tie that fake account back to you. They have found ways to synthesize accounts tied to people's real identities for people who have never had Facebook accounts. Connecting you to your fake account would be trivial by comparison.

    • Only for a couple of years, it doesn't really seem that widely used at this point in time. Google+ is going away but that was much more active and interesting with fewer politics.

    • Mainly attention whores and drama queens and their "fans". SO GLAD I'm not on that clusterF**k of a site.
  • No, they're not (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:37PM (#58232076)
    They're just moving from one of Facebook's data collecting websites (facebook.com) to a different one (instagram.com). They're still giving Facebook roughly the same amount of data.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Exactly. If you jump from one data-mined centrally controlled service, to another data-mined centrally controlled service, what did you win?

      These people do not seem smart enough to step back and evaluate the reasons that Facebook turned out to be a bad idea, and avoid making those same mistakes the next time around. They have just internalized a media message "Facebook is bad" (and it IS bad), without bothering to understand why it is bad.

      This is why we cannot have nice things.

      • Re:No, they're not (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:59PM (#58232270)

        They're not even leaving because of the "bad press," which is what TFA is implying. They really don't give a shit about that. The reason they're leaving Facebook is because they've moved on to the new "shiny thing". They don't really care about bad press, or that they're moving from one sector of data-mining to another. They only care what everyone else is connecting with and keeping up with their peers.

        • by hoggoth ( 414195 )

          So true. My older kid doesn't use Facebook, just Instagram. She says it's because Facebook is where mom and dad are. My younger kid doesn't use Instagram, just Snapshat. He says it's because Instagram is where his sister is.

    • Re:No, they're not (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:51PM (#58232184) Journal
      And once people actually jump ship to a completely different and new platform, FB will just buy that. With promises to not harvest data or share it with other divisions, and the founders quitting in disgust (and a couple billion richer) when FB breaks that promise.
    • Re:No, they're not (Score:5, Insightful)

      by L_R_Shaw ( 5544684 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:56PM (#58232236)

      The problem for Facebook is the amount of personal data that is uploaded to Instagram is vastly less valuable.

      Instagram accounts are for the most part just a username, some banal tag line, and a bunch of emojis along with the stream of lifestyle photos. Valuable, yes, but nowhere near the comprehensive personal data that Facebook users were uploading to their accounts.

      • Re:No, they're not (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:11PM (#58232358)

        The problem for Facebook is the amount of personal data that is uploaded to Instagram is vastly less valuable.

        Instagram accounts are for the most part just a username, some banal tag line, and a bunch of emojis along with the stream of lifestyle photos. Valuable, yes, but nowhere near the comprehensive personal data that Facebook users were uploading to their accounts.

        With improvements to photo recognizing algorithms, those photos could become more valuable than text.

      • by DogDude ( 805747 )
        I don't know about that. They still get all of their location and contact data from their phones (and maybe audio/video?). They can still track them all around the web, since they probably all use their Face/gram logins. I don't know if the data they explicitly put into Facebook ("I like bananas. My favorite color is blue") is more valuable than all of the tracking data they get. And of course, now they can mine those photos, as well, so my bet is that Facebook doesn't care which portal people use, as l
      • One man's trash is another soulless corporation's gold mine.

    • by bigpat ( 158134 )

      They're just moving from one of Facebook's data collecting websites (facebook.com) to a different one (instagram.com). They're still giving Facebook roughly the same amount of data.

      Not for much longer. Social Media as a platform (as a advertising/government surveillance program) is being targeted and destroyed for the threat to our Liberty and well being that it is.

      Sorry Mark. Whats App and "private" messaging platforms that can spy on us are next on the chopping block too.

      The only way for Facebook to survive is to go hard into gaming and real value added content. The Internet doesn't like a man in the middle just collecting value from content we create by taking away our privacy.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The ads and NSA still collect it all.
  • "Users" (Score:5, Interesting)

    by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:37PM (#58232078)

    I've seen very few people actually leaving Facebook...

    I wonder how many of those leaving are real users, vs. some kind of bot accounts that are not getting the traction they used to?

    • Re:"Users" (Score:5, Interesting)

      by OffTheLip ( 636691 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:47PM (#58232146)
      Can the users even truly "leave" Facebook? It's like the Hotel California, 'You can check out any time you like But you can never leave',
      • by Anonymous Coward

        At least the Hotel California is honest about it. Spybook and the gang does everything in their power to conceal their true objectives.

    • Re:"Users" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by timholman ( 71886 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:19PM (#58232390)

      I've seen very few people actually leaving Facebook...

      There's no need to shut down your account if you simply stop using the platform, which is very much what I am observing. I have unfollowed so many people (because they couldn't resist screeching about politics or religion, or sharing clickbait memes), and blocked so many clickbait sites (e.g. "only 0.1% can answer this correctly", "what dog do you look like", etc.) that my feed is a pale shadow of what it used to be. My real friends (as opposed to FB friends) report the same thing. I simply don't feel a need to check Facebook much anymore. There's nothing interesting going on. If I need to reach out to friends quickly, I message them instead.

      I do not doubt that Facebook engagement metrics are dropping in the U.S. Forget the bot accounts. It's the real users leaving who worry them.

      • Do people know if you stop being friends on facebook? I added an old school mate and it's non stop politics now, but I don't want to offend him. Similarly for a person who keeps proselytizing.

        This seems to break the unwritten purpose of facebook - share life events, pics of weddings, pics of the kids, keep everyone up to date. I already feel vastly constrained about what I can post when I do feel like it, most people won't really care about a new video game that I like. It was so much easier on Google+ w

        • Do people know if you stop being friends on facebook? I added an old school mate and it's non stop politics now, but I don't want to offend him. Similarly for a person who keeps proselytizing.

          You don't have to stop being friends. Just unfollow them. I assure you that they'll never know.

          What you'll quickly realize is that the people who constantly push politics or religion on Facebook have no desire to actually engage with other people. Facebook is just a convenient soapbox to preach from while they feel

    • They don't "leave", they just start logging less often until they eventually forget.

  • I would comment but I don't post anymore...

  • by L_R_Shaw ( 5544684 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:50PM (#58232174)

    I have 30-40 friends that I check their Facebook accounts occasionally over the past few years but find myself not even bothering anymore.

    All but a few have bother posting anything for months and in some cases years. Those few that are still active for the most part do so just with profile picture changes or other minor updates.

    I don't know anyone who has bothered to 'leave' as in deleting their accounts. It feels like a ghost town with food still left on the table from months to years ago when the people just left and never came back.

    Facebook's stock is going to be one of the greatest shorts in the history of the stock market. It's only a matter of when.

    • I have 30-40 friends that I check their Facebook accounts occasionally over the past few years but find myself not even bothering anymore.

      All but a few have bother posting anything for months and in some cases years. Those few that are still active for the most part do so just with profile picture changes or other minor updates.

      I don't know anyone who has bothered to 'leave' as in deleting their accounts. It feels like a ghost town with food still left on the table from months to years ago when the people just left and never came back.

      Facebook's stock is going to be one of the greatest shorts in the history of the stock market. It's only a matter of when.

      Exactly what I've seen as well. People just aren't sharing and when they do it's hidden in endless sponsored posts.

      What was great about facebook a decade ago was it really was just your friends sharing stories. Now it's a newsfeed full of crap you dont care about. Additionally, people just added everyone on the planet as "friends", when they really were just people you met once or twice. Once you get to hundreds and thousands of "friends" your feed is going to be full of crap you dont care about once again.

      • Exactly what I've seen as well. People just aren't sharing and when they do it's hidden in endless sponsored posts.

        What was great about facebook a decade ago was it really was just your friends sharing stories. Now it's a newsfeed full of crap you dont care about.

        THIS! I've reported several "Sponsored" posts that were obviously clickbait or outright scams. Not a single one was found to be in violation of Facebook guidelines. It the sponsors check clears, all is good with Facebook.

        The final nail in the coffin for my FB account was when I was using the FB app on my phone this past December. I was commuting on the train to downtown Chicago and was watching about 2 hours a day of YouTube videos. Not surprisingly, I got a data usage warning about the 3rd week of Dec

    • It feels like a ghost town with food still left on the table from months to years ago when the people just left and never came back.

      Correct.

      I use an account I made for someone else years ago, that I have the pw for.
      I get on every once in a while, and from what I've seen, it is becoming more like MySpace all the time.

      • If one really wants to be a hipster, they should get back on MySpace right now. Just like vinyl and cassettes they're going to adopt the old social media site as their next fad sooner or later.

        Then you can say you were back on MySpace before getting back on MySpace was cool.

  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @01:53PM (#58232214)
    Seriously, 12-35 isn't an age group, it's the entirety of the best days of your life (not that life past 35 isn't good, it's great, but generally it's not as good as the previous years). If you're still using social media past 35, I feel sorry for you. If you need a real friend, I'm here.
    • If you need a real friend, I'm here.

      I need a real friend!

    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      If you're still using social media past 35, I feel sorry for you.

      What?? Past 35 is when you have kids. Facebook seems one of the easiest way to share child photos+videos with grandparents.

      • Why can't you just send photos via text messages? Do you really have to give the pictures to FaceBook (whereby they take ownership), so that FaceBook can send your parents pics of their grandkids?

        How about if I create a web page on my computer at home, and you upload all of your personal information, pictures of your kids, whatever, and then your family and friends can also log into my server and see said stuff? I'll do this for free. And if you want to, I'll allow all of your family and friends to up
        • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

          Why can't you just send photos via text messages? Do you really have to give the pictures to FaceBook (whereby they take ownership), so that FaceBook can send your parents pics of their grandkids?

          I can't send photos and videos by text because (1) international texts are ruinously expensive, (2) sending a 2min high-res video clip isn't really possible over text, (3) text message would result in too many parent-support-calls "could you send that again please?" or "I got a new phone and I've lost all the videos of my grandchildren" or "I'm out of space", (4) maintaining a group chat of 8 grandparents+uncles generates too much traffic which would make the tech-savvy uncles disengage, and sending each ph

          • Ahh, internationally speaking, that makes much more sense (and I feel silly for not thinking about that before). Cheers for keeping your folks as close as you can!
      • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

        I didn't join FB until my kid was in high school. It was another tool for me to keep up with what she was doing. And then I was also able to catch up with old friends who I hadn't heard from in ages, or totally lost track of.

    • not that life past 35 isn't good, it's great, but generally it's not as good as the previous years

      I think 35 is about when the best part starts.

      • Well, that's not a normal experience, and shows that you have a great deal of wisdom.
      • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

        At 60, I would say that the late 20s and up to ~40 were the best years of my life. But, I'm about to retire to a lake, so a boat, a dog, and some fishing poles may change my opinion.

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Don't feel sorry for me. I'm 60, and posted about my upcoming retirement last night. 45 of my friends have already responded. And no, I don't have FB friends that I barely know. And yes, I know FB is a shithole, but I've yet to see a good alternative when your friends are spread all over the country, and a few in other countries.

    • I think how one uses social media determines if one is pathetic or not. An obsessive user is pathetic regardless of age although perhaps more understandable among the younger set.

      Do real friends bring apples?

  • is that there's not a lot to keep your users coming back. All it takes is for them and their immediate circle to switch to anther networking site or method. Something hipper and cooler. Once you lose the young 'uns you become uncool real fast. It's only a matter of time before you're associated with... email (*hurk*).
    • I have friends not on any social media, so the email is the main contact method and it gets a lot of use.

  • Many users have multiple accounts so that you can safely check on other people. At some point you stop using those other accounts... Facebook for many people is nothing but interactive address book, with messaging capabilties.
  • by chispito ( 1870390 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:05PM (#58232302)
    Maybe it isn't that

    All the bad press about Facebook might be catching up to the company.

    Maybe it is that the attention spans of those 12-34 year olds have slidden even farther. Or maybe it's just that the platform was due to start declining anyway as people, finally, start to understand how advertising-based business models and OSINT work.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      man i wish slidden was a real word

      • man i wish slidden was a real word

        Sigh. I was going to make a "cromulent" joke but I'm too disappointed in myself. I'll try to scrub it from my brain.

  • The 'Gram (Score:5, Informative)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:20PM (#58232394) Journal

    Did you know that the number of US users "leaving Facebook" is almost exactly the same as the number of US users joining Instagram? ...which is owned by Facebook.

    Sorry, Americans, you played yourself.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @02:24PM (#58232424)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Dracos ( 107777 )

      It's not every business exactly. The ad industry loves facebook, and they've added as much integration as they can think of to their client services.

  • by locking me out of my account and demanding legal proof of my name!

  • The good ones leaving or the anti-vaxxers etc? I think I know the answer!
  • ... I've left LinkedIN. But I'm staying with FB for a while. I have cut back my already meager participation to nearly no participation on FB, though. I cut back for one main reason beside the whole mess that is FB nowadays - when I log on, I cannot get FB to show me my newsfeed in the manner I want to see it, for some reason, FB thinks it knows better what items on my news feed to show me first. So long as FB continues to do that, I will know that I have little to no control over what I do on FB, so I'
    • Look at FBP [fbpurity.com]. It overrides the default view order and can hide all or part of the left and right panes. I used it before I deleted.

      Fun Fact: Facebook does not allow for posting that link in your timeline.

      Bonus: If you log in using Chrome, there's an extension that deletes shit by month, going back as far as you like. I used Social Book Post Manager [google.com]. It took a while, but it works.

      For Twitter, use https://www.tweetdelete.net/ [tweetdelete.net]

      • Thanks for the pointer, by my leaning at this point is to leave FB, and not try to make staying their better.
  • by jsepeta ( 412566 ) on Thursday March 07, 2019 @03:09PM (#58232726) Homepage

    Mark Zuckerberg's lack of ethics is the problem. We're the product and we don't want to be bought, sold, or processed.

    • Hmmm...

      The NY Times is a product I (reluctantly) pay for (yes, I know I can get it for free), and yet I keep getting notices at the bottom of my pages that they want me to accept ads...

      Yeaaaah, NO!

      I'm not wanting to pay for the privilege of seeing ads.

  • I posted this [slashdot.org] the other day.

    I deleted Facebook ...

    Disclaimer: I am not in the demographic listed in TFS. I'm 73 and very disappointed in the Internet at large.

  • Humanity would be better off leaving all so-called 'social media' and learning to actually interact with actual people live in person again.
  • The chap app is annoying and gives more publicity every day it is passing, and even is construed in such a way for you to see movies or other functionalities by mistake.
    The feed is annoying, and they try to change it and fight regularly plugins/app filtering it; they also invent news ways of spamming us, like "a donate bottom"....
    So little wonder people is leaving....
  • Facebook used to be where I went to see what my friends are up to. Now it's where I go to be bombarded with sponsored crap. It's all political outrage, cat videos and click-bait.

Neutrinos have bad breadth.

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