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4.74 Degrees of Separation on Facebook

First time accepted submitter perryizgr8 writes "Facebook Data Team has taken all the friends data of everyone on Facebook and analyzed it, finding out the shortest distance between every two persons. They can now confidently say that the average degree of separation between any two humans is 4.74, not six as previously claimed by various entities."

35 of 216 comments (clear)

  1. Disagree by Kazymyr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Mine is infinity since I don't have a facebook account.

    --
    I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    1. Re:Disagree by Githaron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That is the first thing I thought. It is like saying of the set of people I personally know, there is at most one degree of separation between any two people.

    2. Re:Disagree by Githaron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wait, is the degree 0 or 1 between two people that know each other personally?

    3. Re:Disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You also don't know anyone with a Facebook account, and no one you know knows anyone with a Facebook account, and so on? I'm not sure you understand what they are talking about, you read "Facebook" and just wanted to tell people you don't use it.

    4. Re:Disagree by rapidreload · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Lemme guess, you don't have a TV either but want to tell the world regardless?

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      To all newcomers - people here are very close-minded and can't handle complaints about Linux. Keep this in mind.
    5. Re:Disagree by fisted · · Score: 5, Insightful

      yeah, so antisocial not to hand over all data to facebook.

    6. Re:Disagree by similar_name · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think it would be interesting to see the average degrees of separation for each individual. One person might have an average of 9 degrees separation to everyone else while another individual might average 3. Cross that number with standard demographics data and look at any correlations. x being people not on Facebook you could still compare people with 3 + x degrees vs 9 + x degrees.

    7. Re:Disagree by foobsr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      is the degree 0 or 1 between two people that know each other personally

      The question might be whether the degree between you and yourself is infinity and only approaches 1 after an enormous amount of training. Just a thought.

      The implication is that any small number whithin the context given is worth ... well.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    8. Re:Disagree by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think it would be interesting to see the average degrees of separation for each individual. One person might have an average of 9 degrees separation to everyone else while another individual might average 3.

      Extremely unlikely. Remember that the number of people connected grow exponentially. Your friends are few. Friends of friends are many. Friends of friends of friends is insanely many. Even if you're a tightly knit bunch already after 1-2 steps you're bound to have many connected to the "main" network. Personally I know I have people in my friend list that have gone through every class list since primary school - that's how I'm their friend. If you have *one* of those people as friends, or even friend of friend you're extremely well "connected" even if you can count your Facebook friends on one hand.

      Likewise it's not likely to go as low as 3 because if you say 100 friends average then the most people you can reach in 4 connections is 100^4 = 100 million. The only reason I think you'd go as high as 9 would be if you're an isolated tribe deep in the Amazons with 3 degrees of separation to the few researchers that are there, that are 6 degrees from the rest of the world.

      You can do the math the other way around, to connect 7 billion people with six degrees of separation each degree of separation must expand the network 7 000 000 000^(1 / 6) = 44 times. Is that likely? Yes. That doesn't mean 44 friends though, it's more complicated than that. The first degree is my direct friends, that is simple. The second degree is friends of friends minus those I'm friends with directly but only counting each person once. So if five of my friends went to the same school and know the same person (that I don't), he's only counted once. So the formula is

      Unique persons brought into the network * 1 +
      Shared people brought into the netowork * 1/n where n are the people shared with +
      People already known to the network * 0 = 44.

      That doesn't seem that unreasonable, to my friends my work mates and family are new, to my work mates my friends and family are new and to my family my friends and work mates are new. Different school history, work history, different family, lived different places... each degree brings plenty new. Take for example my study mates, very many of them studied abroad. Each of them is like a new boom of contacts entirely new to the network.

      --
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    9. Re:Disagree by leuk_he · · Score: 4, Funny

      More interesting, who is that 0.75 person. A dwarf, a invalid without legs? a hobbit?

  2. Skewed Data? by Sharkyfour · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wouldn't this be skewed by all the people who befriend random strangers to increase the size of the Mafia's or farm friends?

    1. Re:Skewed Data? by aicrules · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even better than that, it's skewed to those who are on facebook. So you add those two things and we're back to 6 degrees. Dumbass story

    2. Re:Skewed Data? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh knock it off.

      Assuming Facebook relationships are used as a model for our casual relationships outside of Facebook... it probably stands up better than any previously attempted method. It's not like they're working with an overly selective sample group. And what's more, I'm not aware of any major and consistent social differences between people with and without facebook accounts. The tiny percentage of people that don't have facebook accounts specifically because they're socially phobic isn't likely to be statistically relevant.

      The real fault in it, if there is one, is that it's skewed towards 1st world people. A kid in some remote part of Africa that's never been to a large school, or even seen a computer probably can't claim to have met 300 people, by phone, computer or other personal interaction. Casual or not, they're just remote and wouldn't have been figured in.

      Douchebag neckbeards just aren't relevant.

    3. Re:Skewed Data? by Spad · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, given the perfectly valid observation that people on Facebook are much, much less selective about who they "friend" than in real life, the results will inevitably be skewed as a result.

      Additionally, Facebook has ~800 million accounts of which an unknown number are inactive, fake, duplicate or for some shitty new product, which is less than 12% of the global population.

      i.e. Whilst interesting data, it would be stupid to try and claim that it can be used to infer anything about peoples' general relationships outside of Facebook.

    4. Re:Skewed Data? by meza · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Maybe I'm different from other Facebook users then, sure I have some people on my friends list that I only met once at a party and now don't even remember who they are. But in real life there are so many more people that I know casually and would say I'm "connected to" that I am not friends with on Facebook, such as: my hair dresser, my dentist, my boss, other colleagues, all the people I ever went to school with (of whom I've probably befriended less than 25% on Facebook) all the teachers I ever had, my neighbours, distant relatives, my siblings friends etc etc.

      So I think if we included everyone we know in real life the degree of separation would probably go down, not up.

    5. Re:Skewed Data? by DavidTC · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Except that the idea of degrees of separation isn't 'friends', it's 'People who know each other'. No one ever said those people had to be 'friends'. No one's ever bothered to try to define exactly what that means, although at minimum you probably have to have exchanged words with them at some point, and have a way of contacting them.

      Granted, on Facebook, it's probably slightly too loose even with that requirement. Apparently, some people on Facebook go around friending anyone who shows up as a likely friend, regardless of whether or not they actually know the person. And sometimes the other person accepts that request. Clicking on someone's picture and sending a request is probably not actually 'knowing' someone.

      So assuming, on average, one of those bogus 'knowing people' per chain of '4.74' people, which caused the calculation to skip a number that really should be there (They aren't X's friend but they are the friend of the friend of X) ...it comes out to essentially what people have been saying all along.

      Which is weird, because as far as I know, 'six degrees' isn't based on any scientific information...it's from playing a game with Kevin Bacon. (Which is not about who 'knows' each other, it's about who's been in movies and TV shows with each other.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    6. Re:Skewed Data? by Sique · · Score: 3, Informative

      Moreso, the average chain length has nothing to do with the original 6-degrees-of-separation claim.

      The original statement was that there aren't two people on Earth for which the shortest chain of people which connects both is longer than 5 other persons. You could construct a situation where the average degree of separation is slightly above 1, and still have at least two people with a longer chain than 10 other persons. Lets say you have 990 people who know each other, making the average degree of separation of this group exactly 1, and 10 people where one only knows a single person, this one knows the first one and then another one, and the tenth knows the ninth and one of the 990 others.

      Then you would get an average degree of separation of about 1.035 and still the longest chain is 11.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
  3. "Research" indeed by Kittenman · · Score: 5, Funny

    A good promo for Facebook ... gets it in the news without mentioning 'security' Dammit, I just did.

    --
    "The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right sometimes" - Winston Churchill
    1. Re:"Research" indeed by hellkyng · · Score: 4, Funny

      Right! All this wasted research when anyone on 4chan could easily have told you how many friend requests it would take to find the neighbors hot daughter who just went off to college and joined a sorority...

  4. So overall, it is 6... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    6 degrees of separation, not limited to any single medium

    Just under 5 for any two facebook'ees
    but to get to anyone not on facebook, you'd have to go one extra hop

    1. Re:So overall, it is 6... by TexVex · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I understood that six degrees was supposed to be the maximum, not the average.

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  5. no it's not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it is 4.74 + 1; think about it...

    1. Re:no it's not by Tomato42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      4.75 + 1 in my book is very close to the "old, frowned up, value" of six...

    2. Re:no it's not by jrumney · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are whole villages across Asia, Africa and South America that do not have an internet connection. Are you sure everyone on Earth knows someone with a facebook account?

    3. Re:no it's not by MurukeshM · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If even among Facebook users, between any facebook user and other facebook user there is 4.75 person, it is 4.75 and not +1.

      As now you are jumping on the gun thinking that person who does not have a facebook, has 5.75 person between him and anyone else who has or does not have facebook account.

      a) Either you don't understand why he thinks he should add the +1, or
      b) You're trolling, or
      c) You just re-read what you wrote, remembered what averages are, and had a facepalm moment.
      I'm not sure which it is, though.

      He's not saying that there are always 5.74 people between a non-fb-user and anybody else. He's just saying that, given a non-fb-user, we can use one of his friends (which, I admit, he may not have any of)) with an fb account to be, on an average, within 4.74 of another fb user. It might be that for specific cases the actual number (being an integer) is ore than 5.74 or less than 5.74. Let us say there's an average of 1.26 people between a person without an fb account and one with. So we get 6 degrees of separation. :) :P (What was that law about making up stats on the spot?)

      Also, you gave a specific example, which doesn't count when it comes to Statistics. For every dropout who became a millionaire, how many do you think are starving now? Would you use a specific example of a homeless dropout or a millionaire dropout to justify remaining in or dropping out of college?

  6. Re:Kevin Bacon by sco08y · · Score: 3, Funny

    I wanna know my link to Kevin Bacon. Do you think FB would tell all of us how we get back to him?

    Facebook can't, because ever since the introduction of CCTV and police cruiser dashboard cams, they've had to rename it the Six Degrees of Lindsey Lohan.

  7. Interesting by koan · · Score: 4, Funny

    So if you're on Facebook you're only 4.74 degrees from some maniacal jihadist, right-wing Christian extremist or a pedobear...

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  8. Bad Claim by Ibiwan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    1) As others have pointed out, not all humans are on Facebook. I'm sure the FB researchers would be hard-pressed to believe that, though.

    More importantly,
    2) The "six degrees" is supposed to be the MAXIMUM linkage between any two people -- not the average. Good job disproving something nobody ever claimed, guys!

    --
    -- //no comment
  9. Cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I stopped using facebook way before it was cool to stop using it.

    1. Re:Cool by Ravon+Rodriguez · · Score: 5, Funny

      I use Facebook ironically.

      --
      Jesus loves me, he loves me a bunch, because he always puts Jiffy in my lunch.
  10. Misrepresentation of the original research by smellsofbikes · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If anyone wants to read a good analysis of the *original* six-degrees-of-separation study, Malcolm Gladwell wrote about it in The New Yorker about ten years ago. (You may wish to skip ahead to part 3.) The researchers -- and this was Stanley Milgram, of the infamous Milgram Experiment involving people's willingness to torture other people -- gave people envelopes addressed to a specific person, and told them to write their names on the envelopes then give them to someone they thought might know the addressee. When all the envelopes came through, they analyzed both the number of hops and the route. (The average was somewhere between 5 and 6 hops, with some being higher. There is no assurance this is the shortest route, but their initial estimates were 100 hops, not five.) The most interesting part was that of the envelopes that reached their destination, more than half came through just three people. It's the discussion of those people, the ones who know people in various different close-knit communities, that matters: they're the connection points.

    --
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  11. this just in by geekoid · · Score: 5, Funny

    average is less then the most.

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    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  12. Incorrect conclusions by ThePeices · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "They can now confidently say that the average degree of separation between any two humans is 4.74, not six as previously claimed by various entities."

    Wrong.

    They can confidently say that the average degree of separation between any two humans on facebook is 4.74.
    Not only that, but "various entities" never claimed that the value was six for facebook account holders, they claimed 6 degrees of separation between all people.
    The authors incorrectly assumed that every human has a facebook account.

  13. Not exactly. by raehl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The old value is that no person is more than 6 degrees of separation from ANY OTHER PERSON, period. So, randomly pick any person on the planet, and you should be able to get to that person with no more than 5 intervening people.

    An *AVERAGE* of 4.74 doesn't say anything about a 6-person maximum.

    1. Re:Not exactly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Of course, that incredibly vague metric doesn't really explain what a degree of separation is.

      Is it just people you personally know? Or does it count:
      - people you've only met, even if you've forgotten them?
      - people you work with?
      - people you work in the same building as (regardless of whether you work for the same company)?
      - people you work in the same company as (regardless of whether you've ever met them)?
      - people you've done business with at some point (including the check-out clerk at a shop or their manager, whom you've never met)?
      - people you've passed on the street?
      - people you've ridden a bus with?
      - neighbors, whether you've ever talked to them or not? (And in how large of a radius?)

      So 6 degrees of ... whatever. You could say everyone shares only 1 degree since they've breathed the same atmosphere or you could massively increase the steps by making a "degree of separation" limited to parent-child genealogical links. It's all just lies, damn lies, and statistics anyway.