Facebook Shuts Down @Facebook Email System
First time accepted submitter beaker_72 writes "The BBC are reporting that Facebook will end their email system which provided users an @Facebook.com email address in March. The official line from Facebook is that not many people have been using the service. Is that really the case or have they found it too challenging to monetize that part of their service? Did users stay away from this 'service' because they've become more savvy and recognized it for what it was — another way to harvest their data? Or is it the case that the market is currently saturated with free webmail services and there wasn't room for another one?"
I'm guessing that since FB requires an existing E-mail address to sign up, having @facebook.com would be redundant... not to mention the lack of a really decent E-mail client.
How many people even know they had a free @facebook.com email address?
I would think most people have little use for an e-mail address that cannot be accessed from work.
It's a perfect time for being wasted.
A perfect time to watch the stars.
- Burden Brothers, "Beautiful Night"
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Yeah, the email-facebook dichotomy really describes the changes in the web over the last few years.
Standardized tech-based distributed solution without central planning to centralized, secretive, over-advertized, manipulative hyper-corporate sites.
SEO and web 2.0 were poison pills that are killing the actual utility of the internet as a collection of content and systems in favor of "content providers" like facebook.
Do you also judge people by whether or not their home address is in a fashionable neighborhood? Whether their 'casual Friday' shirt comes from L.L. Bean or Wal-Mart?
Seriously, I imagine there are more inane and shallow things to just people on than their email address... but it can't be a long list.
Until this story, I didn't know anyone who remembered that Facebook email was a thing.
The amazing thing is that, like all people with ignorant biases, you actually think these are reasonable statements.