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Facebook Reverts ToS Change After User Uproar

rarel writes "CNN and other media outlets report that Facebook reverted their TOS update and went back to using the previous one. 'The site posted a brief message on users' home pages that said it was returning to its previous "Terms of Use" policy "while we resolve the issues that people have raised."' Facebook's controversial changes to its Terms of Service, previously commented on Slashdot, included a mention that (users) 'may remove (their) User Content from the Site at any time. ... However, (they) acknowledge that the Company may retain archived copies of (their) User Content,' triggering a massive uproar from users and privacy groups."

47 of 260 comments (clear)

  1. huhu by softwave · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'll just stick to Friendface, thank you very much!

    1. Re:huhu by Mascot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to maintain privacy, keep your life private. That's not rocket science. If you put anything personal online on public sites, obviously people are going to *gasp* know personal things about you. It's no different than standing on a street corner yelling about your sex life. If you don't want people to know, don't fucking tell them.

      I fail to see how this really relates to the issue at hand though. None of what you say would be any better protected with the old TOS than this new one. What you're talking about occurs when you put stuff on your page, not when you delete it. True, the new TOS is bollocks in that Facebook claims to retain rights even if you delete content, but the damage you are talking about already occurred so I don't get your point.

    2. Re:huhu by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So telling anyone anything is equivalent to yelling about it on a public street? I don't think so.

      I hope you don't use email - after all, if that information goes through a company's servers, it's fair game for them to do what they like with it, as you might as well have published it on the front page of the news right?

      (If you're going to say that email isn't a "public site", well, neither is facebook - access to information can be restricted to only certain people, just like with email.)

    3. Re:huhu by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's just the point. Facebook's TOS would have allowed them to take your previously private email-like data and published it wherever they felt would be profitable.

      --
      I hate printers.
    4. Re:huhu by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Informative

      There were two other points to their TOS change, besides the "rights continue past the closing of the account" that got people riled up:

      1. Facebook could sell your uploaded content (including writings, photos, etc) to third parties.
      2. Facebook didn't notify users of the TOS change. Instead, you "accepted" the change by continuing to use the service even if you didn't know that the terms had changed.

      Combine this with Facebook shutting down accounts for certain actions (like posting breastfeeding photos) and you could get the following situation:

      1. User logs in, is unaware that the TOS has changed.
      2. User uploads photo to Facebook.
      3. Facebook deems photo inappropriate, closes down account.
      4. Facebook takes content from the closed account (remember, they own rights to it past account closure) and sell it to an ad agency without the user's approval or notification and without the user/copyright holder being compensated.

      Don't like it? Well, you can't take them to court because the TOS binds you to Mandatory Arbitration and who do you think is going to win that? You? Or the company that chooses and pays the arbitrator? (If you answered that you would win, I've got a bridge to sell you.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    5. Re:huhu by raynet · · Score: 3, Informative

      5. If the photo contains persons, the ad agency won't buy the photos without a signed model release, or if they do, you (or the person in the photo) can sue them.

      --
      - Raynet --> .
    6. Re:huhu by zevans · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe in the States. In the UK, you cannot write a contract against UK law. If I decide I signed the TOS under UK law, there's nothing Facebook can do about it. It WILL go to UK court and the LAW dictates the outcome.

      Which is why I think it's a pity they chickened out; I was quite looking forward to the first hilarious court case where the entire TOS would be thrown out as an invalid contract.

      --
      "... and more and more now there are all kinds of electronic goodies available" -- Pink Floyd 1972
  2. Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless team facebook is a bunch of utter morons, they knew that changing the TOS was likely to cause a stir(and, even if it didn't, it would cost a few lawyer hours). So, clearly, they had some reason for wanting to make the change. I'm guessing that that reason, whatever it is, didn't just vanish.

    They'll probably just wait for the fuss to die down, reword it a bit, and try again. Outrage fatigue sets in quickly, as do acceptance, rationalization, and even embrace of the status quo.

    1. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Never underestimate the ignorance of many lawyer types. That's why you often get TOS and such that are so bad - lawyers, not having to fight against the other side's lawyers, tend to write things in their own favor, using simple, broad, ultimately overreaching terms. Still in legalize, of course, so you need a lawyer to understand the suckers.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    2. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by nettdata · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Never underestimate the ignorance of many lawyer types.

      Or their ability to find BS stuff to do in order to validate their existence.

      I won't even tell you about the lawyers I've had to battle (in 2 different corporations) because they wanted a complete list of all of the Open Source libraries and associated copyrights, BEFORE we even started the project.

      They'd heard all about this "Open Source" thing and how evil it could be, after all, and wanted to protect the company.

      They wouldn't green light the project until we provided that list, and yet we didn't even really know what we were building for them, never mind what we were using.

      The nice thing, though, was that we picked every POSSIBLE library that we could find and submitted them and their copyrights for their analysis/aproval.

      We had 4 developers spend an entire week doing that. At the client's expense.

      The end result was that the lawyer eventually backed down on their request, but not until after we outlined all of the expenses incurred as a result of their initial request.

      The owner of that company canned the lawyer shortly after that.

      But that was still a solid week of wasted time that I'll never get back.

      --



      $0.02 (CDN)
    3. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by Culture20 · · Score: 3, Informative

      They'll probably just wait for the fuss to die down, reword it a bit, and try again.

      Then they're doing a poor job of it; Posted in a huge section on the top of every page:

      Over the past few days, we have received a lot of feedback about the new terms we posted two weeks ago. Because of this response, we have decided to return to our previous Terms of Use while we resolve the issues that people have raised. For more information, visit the Facebook Blog. If you want to share your thoughts on what should be in the new terms, check out our group "Facebook Bill of Rights and Responsibilities."

      They're deliberately asking the enraged folk to weigh in on the new ToS. Hopefully they'll announce the change this time.

    4. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by genner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But that was still a solid week of wasted time that I'll never get back.

      You got paid....not really wasted time....for you anyway.

    5. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by Bieeanda · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I saw this coming. Given that they probably haven't learned anything from the Beacon backlash (or the second one, after they tried to sneak it back in), I'm expecting a subtle change of wording and a new placement in the TOS at best.

    6. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by furby076 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I won't even tell you about the lawyers I've had to battle (in 2 different corporations) because they wanted a complete list of all of the Open Source libraries and associated copyrights, BEFORE we even started the project.

      The nice thing, though, was that we picked every POSSIBLE library that we could find and submitted them and their copyrights for their analysis/aproval.

      So wait, you are saying that a lawyer, who is not technically savvy, wanted information to help ensure the company was protected (maybe from a TOS that says something "use of this OSS for personal use is OK but for business use requires you to ....."). And he wanted this information BEFORE you started installing/using the software? Gee, I wonder why a lawyer would want to read a contract before someone, who is not a lawyer, agreed to use the product and thusly enter the company into the contract. So then you guys go overboard, because you act like this lawyer is evil; and according to you this is why the lawyer gets fired. So far the only thing I have read is: "blah blah blah....we are jerks...blah blah blah"

      Not all lawyers are evil...I would wager the amount of evil lawyers to good lawyers is about the same ratio as the amount of evil programmers to good programmers - actually probably less since lawyers could be disbarred if they get caught breaking the law. He was doing his job - protecting the company. You may think you know everything about OSS TOS, though I doubt you have read every single TOS out there for all the software that you use, but you are no lawyer.

      Next time try and be a team player. If I ever ran into a person like you and was in a position to give them a job it would never happen. I would rather give the job to someone who appreciates and believes in using the best product for the job (be it closed source or open source) and would help the legal team go through the TOS (and to let them know the information they REALLY need) to make sure the company does not get put into a detrimental contract.

      --

      I do not support "The Man". I also do not support your irrational stupidity
    7. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by Anonymous+Conrad · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So, clearly, they had some reason for wanting to make the change. I'm guessing that that reason, whatever it is, didn't just vanish.

      The previous blog entry explains the reason: when you post your data it spills over to your friends accounts via inboxes etc. When you delete your account they don't want to have to hunt around all of your friends' and ex-friends' accounts to clean up all of that data, and they don't want to get in a legal mess by not cleaning it up.

      I'm not sure I buy that completely: unless I use Facebook's messaging to send my email address say to a friend then it will only ever be stored against my record and deleting my record should clean it all up. And deleting all messages I created, and all notifications generated by my account should clean up the rest.

    8. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by conlaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Never underestimate the ignorance of many lawyer types.

      Two points here: first, no attorney I've ever met will spend billable time making changes to any agreement unless the client asks for a change. Second, sometimes some member of the client's staff, in an attempt to impress the boss, will come up with language that was used at his former employer and have it inserted in the contract. Then when the shit hits the fan, he'll try to blame it on the attorneys.

    9. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by bwalling · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The nice thing, though, was that we picked every POSSIBLE library that we could find and submitted them and their copyrights for their analysis/aproval. We had 4 developers spend an entire week doing that. At the client's expense.

      So, you knowingly and deliberately inflated your billing to your client by doing unnecessary work due entirely to your own conceit? You owe your client a refund.

    10. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by pcgabe · · Score: 4, Informative

      You got a bad lawyer fired. That was a week well spent.

      --
      Don't put advice in your sig.
    11. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by QuoteMstr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You got paid....not really wasted time....for you anyway.

      There's more to life than money. Some of us want to do something useful or important with our time here on Earth. As Keynes said, in the long run, we're all dead.

    12. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, that *is* what the lawyer asked for, if you read the post.

      He was just doing what was asked of him.

    13. Re:Oh, I'm sure that this will last. by srmalloy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unless team facebook is a bunch of utter morons, they knew that changing the TOS was likely to cause a stir(and, even if it didn't, it would cost a few lawyer hours). So, clearly, they had some reason for wanting to make the change. I'm guessing that that reason, whatever it is, didn't just vanish.

      If the reason for the change was to prevent them from having to do something manpower-intensive whenever a user leaves and closes their page, I can see the reason for it, but the TOS change was worded badly. For example, Facebook makes an advertising image that is a montage of user pages, one of which is User X's page. User X closes their Facebook page and deletes their content. Under the old TOS, Facebook would have to go through all of their promotional material every time a user left to make sure none of it contained any of that user's content. But a statement like "You grant Facebook the right to use your uploaded content for promotional purposes; if you remove your content, Facebook is not obligated to remove existing promotional material that incorporates the deleted content, but may not create new promotional materials with that content" is probably too clear for lawyers to be happy with; if the average person could understand all the material in a contract, we wouldn't need anywhere near as many lawyers, and they'd have to go find real jobs.

  3. "Remember Facebook" by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    An important precedent has been set. The uproar created by the community, including some people cancelling their Facebook memberships, caused the Terms of Service to be reverted. We must remember this. It should be a rallying cry: "Remember Facebook".

    --
    Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
    1. Re:"Remember Facebook" by R2.0 · · Score: 5, Funny

      the scary thing is, I can't tell whether to mod this Insightful or Funny.

      Well played, sir!

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    2. Re:"Remember Facebook" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Um. Yeah. Except this part:

      "Your continued use of the Facebook Service after any such changes constitutes your acceptance of the new Terms."

      Both in the old and new terms of (mis)use, and I'll bet you any amount of money that it'll remain in whatever terms they and their lawyers come up with. It's a "get out of obeying our own rules free" card. The next time you log on to your Facebook account it could be under entirely new terms, NONE of which you actually -agree- with. But because you've signed in, you've implicitly agreed to whatever they tell you to. It doesn't matter how much user input they pretend to be putting into the process if they can reverse it on a whim and without notice, now does it?

    3. Re:"Remember Facebook" by HexOxide · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Would such a clause actually hold up in court? I just can't see how it possibly would, it's purely "You're damned if you do you're damned if you don't.

      In this case, if you simply left, they kept all your content, if you wanted to delete your account, you need to log in to do so, thus accepting the new TOS, allowing them to keep all your content, I thought one of the conditions for a binding contract was that is was under no duress, and this clause appear to be inescapable.

      --
      Can I leave this box empty?
  4. This is the Internet's version of New Coke by R2.0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Or boiling the frog. They tried ti implement a controversial change all at once, and it caused a kerfuffle. Now they will ease it in slowly.

    I have the feeling that Zuckerberg's girlfriend wasn't real happy when he tried to introduce her to anal sex.

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    1. Re:This is the Internet's version of New Coke by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have the feeling that Zuckerberg's girlfriend wasn't real happy when he tried to introduce her to anal sex.

      "Honey, are the lawyers really necessary?"

      "I want to be sure we're doing it right, so I called in the experts".

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
  5. Re:As if the terms weren't draconian enough... by WmLGann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So you're saying you don't want them to have backups of their systems?

    Not being a facebook user I would find it amusing if a meteor took out their data center today and the site can't be restored on account of the ToS not allowing them to keep backups.

    As in many cases with updated contracts (not even sure a ToS counts as a real contract), this is mostly just the paper being adjusted to reflect reality.

  6. Re:As if the terms weren't draconian enough... by superskippy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect that keeping your content indefinitely is what already happens, and they were merely trying to update the TOS to reflect reality. And besides, if you delete stuff from there, how are you ever going to know if all the copies have gone from their computers? And are you expecting them to go through all of their old backup tapes and delete your data?

    It's also important to remember that Facebook is a hugely popular website that makes no money whatsoever. Their basic business model is to sell your privacy and give you in return the website. They haven't worked out how to do it yet, so you can expect more stuff you don't like from Facebook at some point in the future.

  7. National attention by StarvingSE · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Facebook had to do some damage control once the national media decided to make a story about it. There was a CNN story yesterday morning warning Facebook users about what the new terms of service meant and what it means to any content they put up on their profiles. I tried searching on youtube but couldn't find a video, unfortunately.

    --
    I got nothin'
    1. Re:National attention by JayPee · · Score: 5, Funny

      You probably couldn't find the video because it violated the terms of use.

      Heyooooooooo

  8. humanity makes no sense. by owlnation · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While people were right to protest this -- and it's not the first time that Facebook has had to backtrack (probably not the last either), I can't help thinking that this is great effort, wholly misplaced.

    The banks, for exampl,e have stolen billions of dollars from all of us. Where's the protest, people? Where's the effort to find out what happened? Where's the organization to make radical change there?

    What a terrible waste!

    Facebook protesters, learn from this -- if you can achieve this, you can actually make real change in the world -- change that actually matters, not just some trivial thing on a here-today-gone-tomorrow, insubstantial, unimportant, fad website.

    1. Re:humanity makes no sense. by EmperorKagato · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why don't you lead?

      --
      ----- You know you have ego issues when you register a domain in your name.
    2. Re:humanity makes no sense. by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Think for a moment about the institution you're talking about: something deep-rooted for centuries, penetrating every aspect of western life.

      Now think about Facebook. Not even a decade old, and easily replaced.

      Which do you think is easier to change with less uproar? Don't magnify the response on Facebook out of proportions: you don't see congressional hearings, massive politicizing, years of debate, marches in front of mansions, and constant media coverage on this admittedly very minor issue.

      In other words, the uproar over the banking industry IS THERE. The uproar over the housing crisis IS THERE. The uproar over the fundamentals of the American economy IS THERE. You're not addressing the sheeple you imagine.

      You're grandstanding, and it shows, and it doesn't become you.

  9. Why don't... by HexOxide · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why don't they just modify the old TOS to say something along the lines of:
    "When you delete your account, only your profile content will be deleted."
    To cover the issues such as:
    If you send a message to a user, and then you delete your account, they don't need to delete the message from you in that person's inbox
    Or, if you submitted a picture via the graffiti app etc, they don't need to delete your entry on the other person's profile, etc.

    --
    Can I leave this box empty?
  10. Creative works by _LORAX_ · · Score: 4, Informative

    I didn't have a problem with them retaining phone book information, wall posts, ... my beef was with creative works uploaded. Their land grab on rights in perpetuity was insanity. They could use any image I had uploaded for any purpose including commercial and advertising without any compensation whatsoever. They could sell rights to their image database to publishers, the AP, and others without regard for privacy or payment to me.

  11. They made it worse by Zerth · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Facebook showed fear to users. Never do that.

    Now the users will think they can control things.

    If they're quick, break out the LARTs, and delete a few thousand accounts(You asked us not to retain your data, you didn't mean right now?), they might get things back under control.

  12. Big deal about nothing? by CXI · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, Facebook changes its TOS to be clear that it might still have backups of your data around for a while, and people get MAD?!

    "No Facebook, I want you to set it up so if you crash, that's it, all my data is gone for good! That'll teach me!"

    Yeah, it didn't say that specifically, but neither, according to TFA, did they explicitly claim ownership.

    1. Re:Big deal about nothing? by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Informative

      So, Facebook changes its TOS to be clear that it might still have backups of your data around for a while, and people get MAD?!

      You're wrong, and stupid too. The TOS said that not only could they keep backups of your data around, but that they could use them for any purpose. They also granted themselves the right to use your image, likeness, and other materials for any purpose. Ostensibly this is for the purpose of advertising facebook. But what you are missing is that facebook is a corporation and corporations never die. When facebook dies it gets bought by someone else who gets all that personal info, and the right to use it for any purpose. 30 years down the road when no one gives one tenth of one shit about facebook, all that personal info could still be used for any purpose including advertising gay porn. (Which mind you, is okay stuff if you want it, but probably not something that most FB users want their picture on. Or in! They have the legal right to filmgimp your face onto a pornstar!

      This is not much ado about nothing. If this was only about backups they would only need the right to retain your information indefinitely, and maybe make copies of it. They don't need the right to use that media for any purpose, period the end. They CERTAINLY don't need the right to use your likeness for ANY purpose.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. No one seems to get this... by Zakabog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I posted this last time, it seems that no one seems to understand that their ToS change is quite standard.

    With respect to text or data entered into and stored by publicly-accessible site features such as forums, comments and bug trackers ("SourceForge Public Content"), the submitting user retains ownership of such SourceForge Public Content; with respect to publicly-available statistical content which is generated by the site to monitor and display content activity, such content is owned by SourceForge. In each such case, the submitting user grants SourceForge the royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, transferable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform, and display such Content (in whole or part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed , all subject to the terms of any applicable license.

    Why the knee jerk reaction to facebook having the same policies as slashdot? If you delete your slashdot account, what do you think happens to all of your archived comments?

    1. Re:No one seems to get this... by xaxa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because Slashdot and Facebook have different purposes. For instance, I use my real name on Facebook and have photographs and lists of friends.

      It would take some effort to find my real name from my Slashdot user ID (not impossible though), and there's only 2 people who's /. ID I know.

    2. Re:No one seems to get this... by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not likely to post a work of art on slashdot and intend to sell it later.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:No one seems to get this... by Mordaximus · · Score: 2

      Why the knee jerk reaction to facebook having the same policies as slashdot? If you delete your slashdot account, what do you think happens to all of your archived comments?

      The majority of people who contribute on Slashdot are not only tech savvy, but have some understanding of licensing, copyright and the like. We enter in to such agreements knowingly (as far as the IANAL crowd can,) or, if we didn't read an agreement, we know *something* is there.

      Most facebook users don't have an earthly clue how much privacy they're trowing away using the service and and completely unaware of what rights they have (or had) and how exactly the new TOS affects them.

      The biggest problem for me, isn't as much the new TOS, but the fact that it was changed without notification, and by simply using my account, I've accepted the new TOS. That's plain dirty.

  14. Backups... by warrax_666 · · Score: 3, Informative

    One can encrypt backups with keys that are "expire" (read: are thrown away) according to some schedule, so that they can have e.g. backups for the last year, but cannot read backups that are older than that. Should be pretty simple to set up, really.

    --
    HAND.
  15. Re:As if the terms weren't draconian enough... by ByOhTek · · Score: 2, Informative

    They make money, just not by payment from the users.

    They are loaded with advertisements.

    --
    Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
  16. Re:How good was the original ToS? by Overzeetop · · Score: 4, Informative

    It was simple - they took the right to reproduce anything you posted - writing, photos, etc. It was non-exclusive. The key was that if you deleted something or left Facebook, those rights were terminated.

    The change was that you could not terminate those rights by leaving; they were indefinite. The lawyer-speak used was not clear that the allowed use of your content on facebook was exclusively limited to facebook. Now, that's not a huge deal if you can terminate those rights should they attempt to abuse them. That's a big stick held by the content creator, even in light of the all-encompassing rights they took in order to operate their business (and, technically they needed nearly all those rights to generate the facebook pages without running afoul of copyright law).

    By removing the revocation provision, they basically granted themselves perpetual rights to everything. That's a major change. The original TOS had some real safeguards in it, and I read them quite thoroughly when I signed up. This was, dare I say it, the lynchpin of those safeguards - a last, final way to undo what you had done.

    Facebook has real copyright issues with the content they manage, and they don't want to set themselves up for a legal collapse. This change would have made the legal side very, very clean for them. And very unbalanced against members.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  17. People "don't get" the WWW or the Internet by WebCowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...and THAT is why Facebook, or big "social networking" websites in general, have any relevance whatsoever.

    The Internet, and especially the WWW, were supposed to enable ordinary people to publish their own information without influence and control of "big content providers". It was supposed to be the biggest revolution in publishing since Gutenberg's press--not only were books accessible to the masses, not the masses could publish THEIR OWN information!

    What happened to this revolution? The technology is still there, but not only have we not progressed, we've SLID BACKWARDS! We've all abdicated our rights to and responsibilities for our own information to a small handful of very large corporate entities...and then we bitch and moan when those "big content providers" do exactly what we should have expected they'd do with your information--retain it, profit from it, and generally be careless with it.

    That's NOT what the 'net was supposed to be about! We were supposed to "rent the pipes" and storage space like we do our phone lines and self-storage garages and then publish our data ourselves. I was thrilled when DSL came to the market here 12 years ago, followed quickly by broadband from the local cable companies. I was able to get internet connectivity 24/7! Now I only needed to "rent the pipe" and I could have even MORE control over how I published by info because I could RUN MY OWN SERVER!

    It was looking to me like the dawn of a new era--anyone who wanted to could set up their own little server and run their own websites easier than ever before--the BBS world would be able to move forward from the domain of geeks with extra phone lines and modems to something more graphical and interconnected and "plug and play". People were taking about "internet appliances" and I assumed that as time went on that *two way* appliances would become ubiquitous.

    It hasn't happened that way though. There seems to be this insistence that "internet appliances" be one-way client-only devices--merely enhanced TVs and radios where some big network can push information to us as THEY see fit. ISPs have further RESTRICTED the ability to host your own services instead of expanding that ability (primarily because the biggest ISPs are now owned by content publishers). And not only has the old school personal/small community-oriented BBS gone essentially extinct, so have REAL personal websites before they got a chance to really gain traction. We've DEVOLVED from publishing HTML documents on our local ISP's web servers to doing the same on global "web hosts" like Geocities to setting up blogs on global blogging sites to setting up groups on Facebook.

    Facebook isn't an ISP, they are yet another traditional media publisher--we give our info away to them and they publish it as they see fit...just as how Old Media works. I suppose I always underestimate people's capacity for laziness or ignorance in this regard. It seems people just don't "get it", or maybe they just don't care. Whatever happened though, the 'net hasn't turned out the way I thought it would, and no amount of changes to the ToS of Facebook or similar sites will fix what is, in my view, the entirely wrong direction for the WWW.