Facebook Outage Rekindles Push for a Free and Open Web

Facebook, Workplace, Instagram, and WhatsApp went down today for roughly six hours due to a Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) configuration error. Cloudflare describes BGP as “the postal service of the Internet.” It is responsible for routing Facebook’s traffic and making all of its domains accessible to visitors.

At first glance, the outage appeared to be a malicious attack following a Facebook whistleblower’s revelations on 60 Minutes Sunday evening. BGP routing can be hijacked, but so far there is no evidence to suggest that it’s anything other than an ill-timed configuration error.

“The thing I saw at Facebook over and over again was there were conflicts of interest between what was good for the public and what was good for Facebook, and Facebook over and over again chose to optimize for its own interests, like making more money,”  former Facebook product manager Frances Haugen told 60 Minutes.

Haugen copied tens of thousands of documents of internal research before leaving, one which stated: “We have evidence from a variety of sources that hate speech, divisive political speech and misinformation on Facebook and the family of apps are affecting societies around the world.”

Haugen’s interview with 60 Minutes had already made Facebook’s lack of ethical compass a hot topic at media outlets before all of its web properties went down earlier today. This outage is one of the most severe in the company’s 17-year history, due to the cascading effects of Facebook’s infrastructure being tied into so many aspects of every day life. According to The Independent, reports of problems at internet and phone companies started rolling in, as Facebook and its related apps are often confused with the internet.

The whistleblower’s evidence of the pernicious nature of Facebook’s algorithms, combined with the widespread outage of the company’s network of services, has sparked a renewed call for people and businesses to return to the open web.

These kinds of outages disrupt those who have built their communications and commerce on top of Facebook’s products. Businesses put themselves in a vulnerable place when they rely on a walled garden to deliver audience engagement, especially when that garden’s algorithms promote divisive discourse and misinformation. Business owners should take recent events as a wakeup call and revoke all the permissions given to unaccountable platforms for short-term gains. It’s time to invest in the long-term health of your online presence by building on the open web.

As good people work to expose the inner workings of companies that have abandoned principles in pursuit of profit, I am hopeful the web will right itself and applications will become more open and adept at helping people navigate these turbulent times. For those today who are remembering what it’s like to have a breath of fresh air in Facebook’s absence, challenge yourself to start creating content on your own site. Make your website the original source of your work and distribute it out to social networks where you want to extend your reach.

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8 responses to “Facebook Outage Rekindles Push for a Free and Open Web”

  1. The good thing about this was that the speed on the internet increased. Webpages where loading so much faster then before facebook went down. The sad thing that since it is back up we have a slower internet again and we still have to live with all the crap people are saying and posting on fb, opinions, comments, aggression, insulting each other once they have a different view, irritating advertisements that are pushed down our throats and a all the nonsense about their daily (un)happy lives. As if they do not have live without facebook. I liked the fb silence during 6 hours. For me: It should/could have stayed that way.

  2. As long as the RSS format doesn’t evolve from the middle ages to address the needs of the modern web (notifications, ease of use, etc.), sadly I don’t see the Open Web significantly eroding the dominance of private social networks.

    • RSS isn’t really a format that has to change. It’s just a stream of data.

      Think of it like all of Twitter’s content, but with no Twitter app or site to interpret it, so that’s where RSS clients come into play.

      Just like how you need a Twitter app to fully experience Twitter, you plug those RSS feeds into a good RSS client, like NetNewsWire https://netnewswire.com/ (also free and open source), and suddenly you have the “notifications, ease of use, etc.” that you were looking for.

  3. The intent of the “good people” is to crack down on all speech that is not in line with the officially endorsed and allowed view on any matter, giving the government the power to regulate (ban) and criminalize it. That’s why they label it “hate” and “misinformation”.

    The logical, and obviously wrong, consequence of your unconstitutional reasoning is this: If people choose to say the wrong things on the corporate social products, why should they be permitted to have their own website and email anyone freely? That is the opposite of what we want: silencing threats to public safety and prosecuting criticism of the administration and other types of domestic terrorism.

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