Recently,
Facebook forced its using constituency, a population of nearly 100 million people all over the world, to switch over to its new version. This new version had been in construction and planning for several months and developers touted it as a better and more organized form of the social networking website we have all grown to be a part of. The "upgraded" version provides a series of tabs and other organizational controls to allow users to navigate easily to the specific information they are looking for on a particular page. The new version has been available for trial since July (where users could navigate to and from the new version to test the waters), however a mandatory switch was implemented for all users a couple weeks ago. This has created somewhat of a backlash among the
Facebook users of the world. Some see it as something that is now too cluttered and complex, while others view it simply as a change that takes some getting used to.
Personally, I was a larger fan of the old version of Facebook. Like many other disgruntled users, I see these new changes as complicating something that was so refreshingly simple and easy to use. While the update does organize information more effectively and prevent users from having to sift through endless applications and bumper stickers to get to a user's wall, I find myself asking: do we really need all those things anyway? Maybe I am just a simple Facebook purist who liked the utilitarian setup a little too much. This new negative response seems similar to the upheaval the Facebook community was in after the release of the "News Feed," however, I don't see these opposing attitudes fizzling out in the same peaceful fashion. While I am not up in arms or infuriated like some Facebook fanatics, I am now a member of a few anti-update groups that I was invited to by my friends. While it may not seem so, to me this appears to be a watershed moment for Facebook. What will happen if people do not grow to like this version or adopt what it has to offer? Will their fan base decrease? Even though Facebook has become such a staple on college campuses and among people of college age, I think these new changes have the potential to create some unhappy users and other problems down the road.