By Sanjay Pinto
If there was a toss up between facebook and twitter, what would you vote
for? For most of us who are on both platforms, that choice would hinge on what
we use the social media for.
Six years on, with over a hundred and forty million users and three
hundred and forty million tweets a day, twitter does, at one level, come across
as a more non-vegetarian form of the social media! It’s certainly not for the
faint hearted or the prickly pears, as, thanks to a section of users, ‘Hate’
can be accorded ‘Industry’ status here. Clearly, it has digressed from its goal
to ‘find out what’s happening, right now, with the people and
organisations you care about.’ to a ‘devil may care’ spirit. A lawyer
specialising in defamation cases recently wondered if “twitter is too
dangerous a thing to be left to society!” Sid Mallya’s tweet on the
American lady was hardly a ‘Royal Challenge’ and got him into needless trouble.
However, what was intended to be an outlet for ‘pointless babble’ has
turned into a potent tool for sharing bursts of information ‘As It
Happens’. A potential weapon of mass (media) destruction, as die hard users who
target mainstream journalists would have you believe. If Arnab Goswami has been
given the sobriquet ‘Super Chief Justice’ by some bloggers, let me tell you
that there are countless twitterati folk who can be nicknamed ‘single
judges’,for the kind of strictures they pass on anyone they choose. I often
find tweets that are not politically accurate but politically correct! And the
‘Quote’Marshall syndrome exists here as well; with Retweets modified but posted
as ‘RT’, leaving the original author open to unfair sniper attacks.
But there is something remarkable about the medium. What Wren &
Martin may not have been able to accomplish, Jack Dorsey has. The Founder
of twitter has made the fine art of précis writing, that we once used, to
send telegrams or write post cards, seem so simple. And so common. There
can be no better practice with brevity as the 140 character tweet. Why don’t
many political leaders who are active on twitter, use the same skill while
speaking in Parliament?
Now for the Facebook analysis. After eight years, six hundred
million plus active users, and nine hundred million objects (Pages, Groups,
Events), Mark Zuckerberg decided to ask the stock market to put its money where
its status is! And quickly changed his own status update to ‘Married’, inviting
lakhs of almost instantaneous likes and wishes! That’s the beauty of this
medium. From the cradle to the grave, this is your social secretary for life!
You use it to manage your albums, track birthdays, give someone a pep talk or a
poke, share pictures, videos, wall posts and re-connect with friends from your
diaper days. The old Master Card advertisement on priceless photographs can
apply to Facebook when some kindergarten pictures of friends are retrieved from
the attic and shared on walls.
What I like the most about Facebook are the privacy settings. If you are
engaged in a discussion on your wall, no stranger can gatecrash and shower
invectives. For that matter, the danger of strangers is itself remote. The
profile information, photographs and mutual friends are sufficient to sniff out
impostors and trouble makers. Noticed that I haven’t listed the Chat as a draw?
An avid facebooker will tell you how often it hangs; making the good old gtalk
a more hassle free option. And there are issues with adding friends. A
colleague and friend for two decades – Barkha Dutt hasn’t been able to add me.
Neither have I been able to do that. Both of us get a “Sorry, this user has too
many friend requests’!
Coming to my vote? Facebook or Twitter. I’m active on both; a relatively
recent starter on twitter with deservedly a fraction of my facebook friends as
followers. I have to confess a weakness for Facebook. But on my birthday or
wedding anniversary, I’d any day prefer that almost extinct hand written note!
No comments:
Post a Comment