Of course we’re still friends – I’m just ignoring you  


Photo by estoril

This started out as a discussion on Twitter, but it got a bit out of hand and I had lots of questions thrown my way as a result, so I thought I’d capture and clarify it all in a quick blog post.

I kicked it all off by saying this:

Just thought I'd let you know that if we're friends on Facebook there's a 97.46% chance that you're hidden on my timeline. Sorry.

And then people started asking stuff like this:

@dubber talk me through that.Do you mean that you block FB

So then I explained what I meant, which took quite a few posts on Twitter – when really I should have realised immediately that it would be better as a blog post – so that’s what I’m doing now.

Essentially, it means we can be friends without me having to be updated with your every movement. We can talk on the phone without having to leave the line open and connected ALL the time.

My hierarchy of social engagement
Essentially it breaks down like this:

1) If I’m following you on Twitter, it means I think you’re interesting.
2) If we’re friends on Facebook, it’s because we’re friends. At least on Facebook, but probably outside of that context as well.
3) If I’m seeing your status updates on FB, it’s because I’ve decided that of all my friends, I specifically need to know what you’re up to.

So how is it technically possible to still be friends with people on Facebook but not see their every post? Or, to put it another way, how can you have a manageable FB experience, but still allow people to contact and interact with you?

You HIDE them.

Hover your mouse over a status update by someone you’re tempted to put to one side for the moment. You’ll see a little X appear in the top right. Once you’ve clicked that little X, you get an dialogue box asking whether you want to hide that person (you do).

If you hide them, they stop appearing in your timeline. They can still see your messages and respond to them – but you don’t get their every thought on your Facebook homepage – and their favourite videos of chimpanzees don’t push the few people you do want regular updates from off the main page.

I’ve hidden nearly everyone. Lots, anyway. And the beauty is, nobody can see that they’re hidden (though in my case, most can probably now guess that they are).

The point is that this is about manageability, while keeping it a useful tool for contact with the people that you know and meet. And of course, you can unhide and rehide as the mood takes you and the situation demands.

There’s more you can do
If privacy and outright simplicity, rather than day-to-day manageability, is the greater concern – then deleting “friends” (or even yourself) on Facebook is the way forward.

But this is certainly the less radical option.

Personally, I’d happily do without Facebook entirely if it wasn’t for the fact that a few people I know have their best and most interesting conversations there – and it’s certainly a different kind of context and conversation to Twitter.

The two rival social networks are not actually similar enough to do each other’s job.

But please don’t take offense if I happened to miss your Facebook update. It’s not personal – I’m just not listening. At least, not there. If you really want me to know something – send me an email.



Right now:

"@abbomusic They thought about what sort of meaning it makes for people in the context of radio and other media. :)"
 
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2 Comments

  1. I see where you’re coming from with this approach, though I don’t like the idea of hiding all updates from certain people. I have my fb “friends” sorted into groups; photographers, friends, bloggers, film critics, musicians etc and often filter bt these groups and view one group at a time, likewise with Twitter, which also includes a ‘news’ listening it easy to get caught up with local/national news reports.

    Blocking the content for me would often result in me forgetting to ever check the updates of that person. If I am connected with someone I want to see their updates. If they are irritating, put them in a group I don’t check too frequently.

    Posted September 3, 2010 at 2:18 am | Permalink
  2. I gave up on Facebook a couple of years ago when it just became all games, and although I try and use MySpace for music, it is just a shocking place now.
    Twitter works very well, as long as you use something like TweetDeck, where as you do on Facebook you gan set filters and columns that others can not see. I use lists that are publicly viewable to show where I think people sit, and that should be a clue as to when I am going to see their tweets and interact – football fans at weekends etc.
    Once Twitter matures a touch more and it stops being, for many, just a challenge to “get followers” it will be interesting to see what new functionality comes out to “find” the right people

    Posted September 3, 2010 at 7:54 am | Permalink

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