July 24, 2007

“hugh’s law”

Hugh’s Law: “All online social net­works even­tually turn into a swampy mush of spam.“
Which explains why early adop­ters are always fleeing online social net­works [e.g. Lin­ke­dIn], only to join a new one [e.g. Face­book]. They’re fleeing the spam.
[For a far more lear­ned and autho­ri­ta­tive thought on the sub­ject than my own, go read Clay Shirky.]

"Hugh's Daily Cartoon" Newsletter. A new cartoon sent out every weekday morning to your inbox [RSS version here.]. A wee chuckle to start your day off right etc.

20 Responses to ““hugh’s law””

  1. Chris Miller says:

    Hugh:
    Thanks for the com­ment on my blog. There is a very good chance that Hugh’s Law could be a defi­ni­tive tur­ning point. With VC funds thro­wing money at appli­ca­tion deve­lop­ment, over enthu­siasm has allo­wed a lot of gar­bage to pollute a pre­viously use­ful medium. There was once great value in social net­wor­king; what went wrong?
    An even bet­ter ques­tion– can we drain the swamp?

  2. tomdog says:

    I’ve never really expe­rien­ced spam on Lin­ke­dIn and I still con­si­der it to be a good, if not frumpy, business-only net­wor­king site. Did I flee from Friends­ter, to Tribe, to MyS­pace, to Face­book etc. — yes, but those inter­fa­ces, in the spi­rit of being “open” were easily exploi­ted by spam­mers. I don’t know if you are fami­liar with Orkut, but des­pite being somewhat limi­ted on exci­ting doohic­keys is much more permission-based the way Face­book is, and it’s been around for years and ser­ving peo­ple very well — it’s huge with Bra­zi­lians for some rea­son go figure.

  3. Robin says:

    Do you think Hugh’s Law applies if you res­trict and acti­vely police your mem­bership? Or does that inva­li­date your defi­ni­tion of a social net­wor­king site? I am thin­king spe­ci­fi­cally of asmallworld.net, the super-elite’s social net­wor­king site.

  4. julien says:

    not sure i agree, hugh. i sus­pect they leave because of pro­gress– someone will even­tually create something newer and shi­nier, cau­sing them to jump ship. that is what early adop­ters do, after all– adopt, early and often.

  5. Thom Singer says:

    The pro­blem with all online social com­mu­ni­ties is that not ever­yone sha­res the same phi­lo­sophies about how to use them, and thus they lose their “community-ness” once the mas­ses jump on board.
    Lin­ke­dIn works great for some, but those who are “link collec­tors” muddy the waters of who is a REAL con­tact. If you are only a digi­tal link, and not a real friend, there is a HUGE dif­fe­rence.
    In the real world, com­mu­ni­ties tend to keep out the rif-raf, in part because to belong to a group means you have to invest real time and emo­tions to par­ti­ci­pate and cul­ti­vate your rela­tionships. AKA, you have to show up in per­son and talk to peo­ple. On-line social net­wor­king com­mu­ni­ties take away some of that, and thus ever­yone can jump in and play (and bend the rules). .… Thus making Hugh’s Law a fact, and one that will con­ti­nue to exist.

  6. Peter Ralph says:

    Hugh —  it’s the Dunning-Kruger effect — no known anti­dote.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning-Kruger_effect

  7. John Dodds says:

    It depends whether peo­ple want social net­works or social net­wor­king — the lat­ter are I think more likely to be aban­do­ned because indi­vi­duals on them are likely to have more con­tacts and thus are more vul­ne­ra­ble to the net­work effects of spam.

  8. Tim Clague says:

    That’s the cha­llenge for us con­tent crea­tors. When you see something become popu­lar then you know it is old hat — and try to do the oppo­site. Never an easy life.

  9. Jon Matejcek says:

    Hugh,
    Your head­line 8 days ago said, “Sign up to Face­book or con­sign your career to the dust­bin of his­tory etc etc.“
    This, after Kottke dub­bed Face­book the “next AOL.” I was inc­li­ned to agree with Kottke on this one; social net­works are like indie rock bands — cool until ever­yone else thinks so …
    After today’s post it looks like you would agree, too. Or am I mis­sing something?

  10. Eric Searing says:

    I don’t mind rela­tive spam but get tired of the high school shout outs. The main pro­blems I see with Social net­works is that they attract too wide an audience (as sta­ted above).
    They need to be more the­ma­tic, much the way niche forums are. I’m loo­king for the over-40 over-weight, fre­lance web deve­lo­pers net­work, without high-school “entre­pre­neurs”.
    e.

  11. Andy Polaine says:

    No it’s not, it’s the Tra­gedy of the Com­mons. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons

  12. Viola says:

    Does this mean that rela­tionships for­ged in the vir­tual world are doo­med not to last? Does this mean that we simply can­not build a long-lasting and effec­tive glo­bal village in the vir­tual web of networking?

  13. John Caddell says:

    Lin­ke­dIn works fine for me, though I don’t care for its attrac­ti­ve­ness to “con­nec­tion who­res” who simply want to con­nect to me to access my net­work. The­re­fore I was happy to find out how easy it was to fire a con­nec­tion (who hap­pe­ned to be a rec­rui­ter, as many of the CWs seem to be).
    It sure felt good to reduce my net­work by one.
    Regards, John

  14. Ed says:

    It’s all about how you use these tools, isn’t it? Whether you are online or offline or up a gum tree?
    Think busi­ness cards: some peo­ple walk up to you and stuff them in your hand. You never speak to them again. Others will con­verse with you and, when it’s dee­med worth it, you exchange cards…
    I clas­sed myself as a rela­ti­vely un-sociable cur­mug­deonly cha­rac­ter in res­ponse to the first wave of all this when having millions of friends was impor­tant (which is still going on clearly in face­book, it’s just the jus­ti­fi­ca­tions have chan­ged a bit). I still do class myself this way, and have con­cerns that the ‘E’ type (MBTI) beha­viour is domi­nant in many of our unders­tan­dings of the who/how/what/why/when of online com­mu­ni­ties — e.g. “we must make the lur­kers come out and say something”. Anw­yay, that’s a soap­box for another day.
    Obviously inti­macy and unders­tan­ding of eachother is more impor­tant than quan­tity for anything of any long term use, so I never make friends with anyone I don’t know — par­ti­cu­larly on lin­ke­din which is an exce­llent pro­fes­sio­nal recom­men­da­tion and refe­ren­ces engine… so if it’s full of gack, I can’t show that page to poten­tial clients, ergo I don’t relate myself to peo­ple I don’t care about…
    Maybe this is why I don’t get any spam (apart from the relent­less new group invi­tes from those who I know who set groups up almost psycho­pathi­cally)…
    It’s a tool. Peo­ple use it in dif­fe­rent ways. Use it in the way you lead your life, and it will reflect that back at you (?)…
    But I know this is cur­mud­geonly.. an

  15. Scott Allen says:

    Right now, the Web 2.0 dige­rati are moving to Face­book because it’s more tech­no­lo­gi­cally inte­res­ting. A few non-techie very early adop­ters are chec­king out Face­book because all the Web 2.0 dige­rati SAY “ever­yone is moving to Face­book”. When they get there, they find that for the most part, that’s not true, and there’s only much busi­ness con­ver­sa­tion on there if your busi­ness is Web 2.0 stuff.
    The rea­lity is that Lin­ke­dIn is still an essen­tial busi­ness tool for a whole lot of peo­ple who don’t read blogs, who don’t follow Web 2.0, and who wouldn’t find any subs­tan­tial value in Face­book if they went there right now.
    And it’s the typi­cal fish­bowl pro­blem when we talk about this in the blo­gosphere, because we’re all the Web 2.0 dige­rati and early adop­ters. It’s the height of self-importance for Web 2.0 blog­gers to think that your imme­diate circle of friends is repre­sen­ta­tive of the gene­ral inter­net popu­la­tion, or more spe­ci­fi­cally, the gene­ral Lin­ke­dIn user base.

  16. lone gaffe says:

    Leo Laporte said something about this yes­ter­day.
    Char­ging as little as $1 to join a social web2.0 ser­vice almost totally eli­mi­na­tes the bozos who have nothing to con­tri­bute. It also eli­mi­na­tes spam and unde­rage peo­ple.
    The Web des­pe­ra­tely needs a real micro-payment sys­tem. It needs it more than it needs HTML 5.0

  17. I agree with the com­ment that what threa­tens Lin­ke­din is the pre­va­lence of “open net­wor­kers” who pro­mote net­wor­king con­nec­tion without really kno­wing each other. That leads not so much to spam­ming — which I don’t think is a major pro­blem with Linek­din, unlike MyS­pace — but to a dilu­tion of the value Lin­ke­din offers because you can’t count on the rela­tionships for cer­tain things. I still like the for­ma­lity of Lin­ke­din, though.

  18. Iain says:

    Ama­zingly I’ve mana­ged to avoid spam on Lin­ke­dIn, but I’ve had one ins­tance of spam on face­book to date. Other­wise though I think that law of yours holds true…

  19. vikram says:

    too much of a coin­ci­dence — after lea­ving a mes­sage on a cartoonist’s face­book entry and then rea­ding a blog about it here. for a brief second, i was a spammer.

  20. WOW! What a great dis­cus­sion topic! So many great points from ever­yone; in one way or another I agree w/ almost ever­yone.
    Grea­test cause for early adop­ter exo­dus? Just that, they are early adop­ters loo­king for the shi­nier new thing. Social media has to figure out how to reward early adop­ters for sta­ying; beta tes­ters?
    There are some at the end of the early adop­ters, who are really at the front of the pack of sheep, that leave b/c the lack of accep­tance by social media mas­ses.
    I think in the case of Lin­ke­dIn there are two major pro­blems:
    1. One there is NO real way a crea­ting valua­ble rela­tionships w/o sig­ni­fi­cant inte­rac­tion and colla­bo­ra­tion. Lin­ke­dIn doesn’t really faci­li­tate such action.
    2. Mal­colm Glad­well in his book Tip­ping Point belie­ves you truly have a limit to the num­ber of rela­tionships you can manage. Social media pro­bably extends that num­ber by 15%, but you are still limi­ted.
    Is social media a swamp? Only because we can’t see the total bene­fit yet, so natu­rally we become skep­tic of its suc­cess and durability.