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Why Are Some Users Fleeing Facebook?


It's happening slowly, and no one can say exactly why. But there's no denying that once-avid users are turning their backs on Facebook. While some have looked hard at the numbers behind this small but burgeoning trend, a New York Times reporter decided to get the story straight from the horse's mouth -- asking friends why they'd left the social networking site.

The Times reports that the first Facebook backlash began when the site pulled Scrabulous, a Scrabble-like application, due to copyright disputes in 2008. Former Facebooker Leif Harmsen likens the corporation to the North Korean regime. He even sells shirts that say 'Shut Your Facebook.' Alex, a friend of the reporter, says the demise of Scrabulous was only the beginning. Soon enough, Facebook was filled with users "trying to sell books and movies," the site becoming less of an online meeting place and more of an online marketplace. For some, like Caroline Harting, Facebook felt more like a way to stalk friends than a way to make friends. She says she "felt fairly detached" from her buddies.

Most likely, it's just a matter of folks moving on to newer trends. That's what writer Julie Klam told the Times, anyway. She says that the small, but obvious exodus from Facebook is comprised of "kids getting tired of a new toy," that newer toy most likely being Twitter. Facebook isn't even close to dead yet (The site reported 87.7 million unique U.S. visitors in July.), but according to some, the grim reaper might be waiting around the corner. After all, it's never a good sign when moms are one of your more popular demographics. To paraphrase a certain country-music legend, the reasons to quit Facebook are getting bigger everyday (if you don't believe it, read this list). [From: The New York Times]

Tags: facebook, privacy, social networking, SocialNetworking, top, trends, twitter, web

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