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The death of Facebook?

IN Indonesia – Southeast Asia’s largest, 265 million-strong economy – Facebook is faced with an unexpected dead end. After 12 years of super-charged global growth, the USD414 billion market cap champion and campus-based phenomenon has become the social media of choice for “old” people.

Indeed, it appears to be losing its allure with its core demographic: the young, educated and upwardly mobile. In fact, many younger users have just stopped logging in.

The reason?

It’s simple. The “kids” apparently see Facebook as clunky and outdated. It’s tiresome algorithms prioritise family and friends over more interesting content.

Of course, there are still markets where Facebook remains dominant. In Myanmar, some 91% of internet users frequent the site. Whether this level of penetration can be sustained as users in Yangon, Mandalay and beyond become more sophisticated is another matter.

Elsewhere, Facebook’s well-publicised problems with data security and hate-speech haven’t helped, but in much of ASEAN, such concerns have barely registered. Users in Jakarta or Kuala Lumpur have little idea about the allegations against Sheryl Sandberg of “lean in” fame. We are so used to hypocrites that we hardly notice.

Facebook’s real problem, however, is that it’s BORING.

LINE President and CEO, Takeshi Idezawa. Indonesia’s user base is over 30 million - the largest outside of Japan. Photo by Phys.org
LINE President and CEO, Takeshi Idezawa. Indonesia’s user base is over 30 million - the largest outside of Japan. Photo by Phys.org


With dinosaurs like Myspace, Bebo and Friendster already condemned to the digital graveyard, could this be the beginning of the end for Facebook?

As I sat down for lunch back in December last year with a group of college students from one of the Republic’s premier tertiary institutions, Gadjah Mada University in the cultural capital of Yogyakarta, their views on Mark Zuckerberg’s start-up turned lifestyle symbol were clear.

Rully Satria, a 20-year-old college student from Padang, considers Facebook as passé: “I haven’t used it in a while. The times that I do – which are rare – I’ll check up on how my family relatives have been doing.”

Reports linking Zuckerberg’s brainchild with the controversial Cambridge Analytica have tarnished their public image. Photo by Getty Images
Reports linking Zuckerberg’s brainchild with the controversial Cambridge Analytica have tarnished their public image. Photo by Getty Images


19 to 34-year-olds constitute 50% of all web surfers in Indonesia. Most millennials, like Rully, have grown up with the Internet. However, in 2018, the largest number of new Facebook users were aged between 45 to 55 years old. Indeed, it has become the domain of millennials’ parents and grandparents.

“Only my parents, aunts and uncles are still using it”, Rully adds.

Facebook is primarily a website platform, made for desktop users. Newer social media applications are exclusive to smartphones, which require a different kind of fluency. And the more complex smartphone interface provides millennials with a blanket of security.

Once a bastion of free speech, recent government and military intervention has also often forced Facebook to bend the knee, to the detriment of human rights.

In Vietnam, the restriction of “toxic” anti-government content on the site has alienated activists and silenced free speech. Meanwhile Myanmar’s military, the Tatmadaw, has used fake Facebook accounts to incite genocide against the Muslim Rohingya.

91 per cent of internet users in Myanmar use Facebook. The Tatmadaw (Myanmar Military) took to the site, inciting genocide against the Muslim Rohingya. Photo by Craig Mod, The Atlantic
91 per cent of internet users in Myanmar use Facebook. The Tatmadaw (Myanmar Military) took to the site, inciting genocide against the Muslim Rohingya. Photo by Craig Mod, The Atlantic


In this age of mass data harvesting, anonymity has been a priority for many internet users. Reports linking Facebook with the controversial Cambridge Analytica have tarnished their public image.

The fact that Zuckerberg’s brainchild has been known to sell personal information to advertising companies deepens the distrust. On the other hand, Twitter and Instagram don’t rely on personal information, giving a greater feeling of privacy.

“I don’t want them to know about my social life,” adds Rully.

So, where is everyone moving to? In Indonesia, Instagram, LINE and Twitter are viewed as much more stylish and streamlined. Moreover, many users find Facebook’s algorithms to be random and disjointed.

Rully, 20-year-old university student, rarely uses Facebook. 'I don’t want my parents to know about my social life.' Ceritalah ASEAN Photo
Rully, 20-year-old university student, rarely uses Facebook. 'I don’t want my parents to know about my social life.' Ceritalah ASEAN Photo


Probo, a 23- year-old recent graduate from, adds, “Political figures and celebrities are also more active on Twitter. The 140-character limit makes posts a lot more readable.”

LINE, the Japanese-owned messaging service, has become immensely popular in Thailand. LINE TODAY, its daily news platform, boasts a user base of well over 32 million in the Southeast Asian country alone.

In contrast, Facebook’s “News Literacy” programme, launched last year, hasn’t generated much excitement.

Rully, for instance, turns to Instagram for his daily news, “Tirto.id, Opini.id and Beritagar offer infographics which are more informative and interesting to me.”

Adryz Ariffin, a social media marketing executive based in Southeast Asia, has said this shift away from Facebook hasn’t had an immediate impact on digital marketing. “Facebook still has the most returns and reach. For most Southeast Asians, it’s their first point of contact with the Internet.”

Probo, a recent graduate, prefers Twitter: 'The 140-character limit makes posts a lot more readable.' Photo by thenextweb.org
Probo, a recent graduate, prefers Twitter: 'The 140-character limit makes posts a lot more readable.' Photo by thenextweb.org


Facebook and Google continue to dominate online advertising markets in Southeast Asia.

“Indonesia is the biggest online market in Southeast Asia. Vietnam and Myanmar are growing, but aren’t on the map yet.”

Even Adryz concedes that he has already left the platform and predicts that in five years or so, it will no longer be number one.

Maybe what we’re seeing is not so much the “death” of Facebook as its dethronement.

It was once the king of social media - it WAS social media back in the day.

But in most of Southeast Asia, that’s no longer the case.

Can an old dog still learn new tricks? We’ll have to see.


*Follow Karim Raslan on Twitter @fromKMR / Instagram @fromkmr

** The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of Astro AWANI.





 

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