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by jonahb 2677 days ago
Yes, the free market is making it very easy to move away from Facebook.
2 comments

You are not compelled by law to use it. You may be addicted but it is a different problem. So the short answer is it just you that makes it difficult.
> You may be addicted but it is a different problem.

Not everyone is addicted, but rather Facebook has become arguably necessary because of its network effect.

Facebook has become the de facto standard of communication in some institutions. For example, in some universities, important notices on due dates or class cancellations is done solely through Facebook. One may be very heavily pressured to use it.

The original article points out that you don't even have to use Facebook yourself for someone else to put your data there.
That's true, and I'm not sure what rights Americans have in this case, it's hard to tell. Could claim defamation possibly, or impersonation?
The usual one that's claimed it that it's facebook's free speech. Can't defame someone with unpublished, accurate information ..
I suppose they do have a right to express what they observe.
Yeah, and kids aren't compelled by law to smoke. If you think that Facebook addiction is the result of human weakness, you need to wake up. Facebook has methodically exploited human psychology for years to cultivate addiction. Check out Roger McNamee's new book.

By the way, I don't have a Facebook account.

Is this sarcasm? Because I'm fine without Facebook and there are plenty of social media options.
Yes, it was sarcasm. They're more entrenched than you'd like to admit. They have a monopoly on social networking, they control a huge portion of digital advertising, and together with Google, they've bought a huge swath of Washington D.C. (see McNamee's new book). The results aren't surprising: regular abuse of customers, exploitation of human psychology to cultivate addiction, the peddling of a harmful product to minors. They're a consolidated version of the cigarette industry. Free markets ain't working—we antitrust action and regulation.