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."
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
Wouldn't this be skewed by all the people who befriend random strangers to increase the size of the Mafia's or farm friends?
sharkyfour.com
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
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
it is 4.74 + 1; think about it...
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.
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."
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!
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I stopped using facebook way before it was cool to stop using it.
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.
Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
average is less then the most.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
"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.
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.
paintball