Fed Up With Facebook? Delete it, and Here's How

His language may have been grandiose, but Zuckerberg's message was clear: Facebook is only as big as its users have allowed it to be. Zuckerberg designed the Facebook universe, but it was the online proletariat that provided the gravitational force necessary to keep everything in orbit.
Somewhere between then and now, however, things changed. The campfire's been extinguished, the 'Kumbayah' songs of global online brotherhood are now nothing more than a faint echo.
Just a few months after its 400 millionth user hopped aboard, the company faces a scenario in which a sizable swath of its members are looking for a way to drop out of the Facebook loop altogether. Although the specter of a Facebook exodus has reared its head in the past, the possibility of a "Great Facebook Deactivation Wave" now seems more plausible than ever. Even U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer has a beef with Zuck.
In the blink of an eye, Mark Zuckerberg has gone from boy wonder to Big Brother, from Mozart to Mao. The man and his machine have suffered a populist fall precipitous enough to make even Tiger Woods wince with empathy. All this calamity, of course, begs the obvious question: "How did things go so horribly wrong?"
Paradise Lost: Tracing Facebook's Fall From Grace

Facebook also unveiled its new and highly controversial Instant Personalization service, which gives third-party sites access to an individual's personal data in order to market products, songs or news stories according to his or her preferences and online behavior. The Instant Personalization and Open Graph systems, by themselves, probably wouldn't ruffle too many feathers. The problem, however, is that Facebook's bigwigs have given users remarkably little control over either mechanism. Instead of making the services "opt-in," the social network has set them as the default setting for every user, effectively rendering privacy as the exception -- not the rule.
To make matters worse, Facebook's privacy policy has become so woefully complex, it makes a tax return form look like a coloring book. As the New York Times recently pointed out, the company's privacy manifesto, weighing in at 5,380 words, is actually longer than the body of the U.S. Constitution. Since April, the site has fallen prey to a bevy of bugs, some of which were found to leak user e-mail information, or reveal private chat conversations to strangers.
Facebook, for its part, has taken action to patch up some of its holes, and has unveiled a revamped verification system to guard against hackers. That probably won't do much, though, to help assuage the persistent fears that Facebook itself is eroding the privacy rights of its own citizenry. The very users who comprise the vertebrae of Facebook's digital Leviathan have thus begun to voice their displeasure -- and have started walking out.
How to Cut the Cord

As explained on WikiAnswers, deleting your account is entirely feasible, although we wouldn't exactly call the method simple. Before you begin, you should check to make sure you don't have active accounts on separate sites that require you to log-in via Facebook. If you still want to access these sites after you bludgeon your Facebook account to death, you should make sure you have some alternate means of logging in.

After that, you'd think the entire process was finished. And you'd be wrong. You see, Facebook kindly gives you a full 14 days to feel guilty about your decision. Should you log in during the ensuing fortnight, or even if you click a "like" button on a third-party site, your account will suddenly jolt back to life.
If you're still having trouble shaking free of Zuckerberg's unique stench of dystopia and formaldehyde, you can always e-mail network administrators directly at privacy@facebook.com, and ask them to delete your account. It'll probably take a few days for Facebook's employees to answer, but you should get a confirmation response, eventually.
Once you receive it, you should probably double check by trying to log-in to your account. If you can't log in, and if you don't get a message asking you to reactivate your account, Zuckerberg's army of elves has done its job.
Profile assassins beware: even after you've cremated your account, its spirit will still live on in the social networking ether. That's because Facebook, according to Future Tense's John Moe, will retain your personal information for data mining purposes, even after you've spread your profile's ashes across your local beach. Some things, as Daniel Johnston once told us, apparently do last a long time.
"I can't quit you"





If it's external hackers you're worried about, you can always delete your apps and the data stored on them, which will now be preserved indefinitely under the site's new policy. Otherwise, Facebook's new security measures give users newfound control over who logs in to their account, and from where they do it. It sounds good on paper, but then again, it's Facebook we're talking about. Accepting privacy protection from Mark Zuckerberg is like accepting relationship advice from Larry King.
A Post-Facebook Era?
Whether or not Facebook's empire is crumbling, one thing is obvious: the social network is at an evolutionary crossroads.What the standoff ultimately boils down to is a simple conflict between corporate hegemony, and consumer demand. Is Facebook confident enough to pursue its agenda against the tide of widespread protest? Or will it eventually come to terms with the fact that its future remains inextricably linked to its digital body politic?
In February, Mark Zuckerberg wrapped up his glorified pat on the back by writing, "We look forward to building more things and continuing to serve you for many more years to come." The question now, though, is whether Facebook's users still want to be "served," or if it's time for us to circle the wagons, and regain control over a social phenomenon that, for all intents and purposes, was ours to begin with.
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Comments
57
Subscribe to commentsTookiTooMay 18th 2010 9:16AM
What the heck is the big deal? The only ones I see making a big deal out of this is the media. Set your controls how you want them and stop causing trouble. Geez!
sweetkyouMay 18th 2010 9:07AM
Ummm... AOL speak for yourself! Your even harder to get rid of!
ladyb7190May 18th 2010 9:29AM
Want to get booted off facebook. Just make a comment about a women who has her 2 young girls no more than 5 or 6yrs of age dressed in negligees and high heels making sexy poses. Tell her she is attracting pedophiles and should be ashamed of herself. Facebook will disable you! I should have reported them both to the Police. Shame on me!
TookiTooMay 18th 2010 9:22AM
Excuse me Jonl I don't use facebook for hook ups or to trash people. I used it to keep in contact with friends. And I have found a lot of friends that I have lost over the years through moving etc. Don't make general statements like that! People only know as much as you post and I don't post my personal business just like I don't take about it on the phone. And I do keep in contact with people on the phone facebook just makes it easier to say Hi when sometimes that is all you have time for. If you don't like facebook then get off it and let the others of us who do enjoy it.
JudiMay 18th 2010 3:42PM
I have discovered that if you have your AOL e-mail open and log onto Facebook, Facebook will suggest a friend to you.....and guess where that info comes from? Your AOL address book. I have had it happen several times. Someone that I haven't talked to for many years suddenly is suggested as a friend and the only place their information could be accessed is my AOL address book.
Scary! Makes me wonder what else they can access in my computer....like my banking records, etc. And yes, I will contact AOL. Do I think it will do any good? No....so protect yourself.
GaryMay 18th 2010 8:52PM
What a LIE!!! You cant delete your account!!! I tried and you still get the same message, "You have deactivated your Facebook account. You can reactivate your account at any time by logging into Facebook using your old login email and password. You will be able to use the site like you used to.
Reclaim your Facebook Connect accounts:
Additionally, you have created accounts at the following sites using Facebook Connect. Click on the links below to create an independent account with those sites:" Thats it I,m contacting someone legal.
Fred RaelMay 18th 2010 10:06AM
please leave my face book log on alone AOL THE
yard666birdMay 18th 2010 10:29AM
obviously u have no idea wat im gettin at.. but then again i wouldnt expect a lame ass too.. takes one to know one
RedsQMeeMay 18th 2010 10:58AM
Facebook Exodus? More like a poorly disguised hit job in response to the President's dire warnings about how dangerous the internet is. It is after all Loaded with Conservative and disenchanted Liberal Anti-The-One blogs. Securing privacy on FB is all in your control. AOL isn't even trying to disguise its agenda anymore...just more liberal Media attempts to curb free speech.
Abe the Great!!May 18th 2010 5:17PM
C'mon people...If ur too uneducated about the Internet, don't get on Facebook!!! It's a GREAT networking system to keep in touch with old friends and relatives. It has the same potential for u getting an email from your kid saying they need $$ to get them out of jail--wise up!!! Learn about the hazards of being online!!! Facebook is GREAT!!! Try Myspace and see how things go with that, where 90% are kids!!!!!!
johnnyMay 18th 2010 5:19PM
this writer is such a drama queen! hes making facebook sound like such a tyrant and its users like helpless victims!
its easy and simple, if you dont like facebook, just leave!
"The man and his machine have suffered a populist fall precipitous enough to make even Tiger Woods wince with empathy"
comparisons like this one and over-exaggerative writing makes this article a waste of time to read; just state the facts and thats it
PeckerwoodMay 19th 2010 4:46PM
You can always resort to feeble, and juvenile tactics. Get yourself kicked off of FaceBook for good, by posting something really wretched, and disgusting. Just read their terms and violate the sh** out of them.
martyMay 22nd 2010 5:18PM
I believe in free speech, but I wish the rotten mouth comments would be screened out !
misskittyMay 25th 2010 8:15AM
facebook is so boring, i dont use fb all the time thats why i switched to yuniti and skpe bc there better
timMay 25th 2010 5:55PM
I deactivated my account, it said it was deactivated. I didnt even enter my password, I just hit submit and my page popped up again, WITHOUT EVEN ENTERING MY PASSWORD! ALL IT SAID WAS PASSWORD WHICH IS NOT MY PASSWORD!
These people have got you and you can't quit. I wan't to know where to join a class action lawsuit.
Anyone know?
jhrochesternyMay 25th 2010 7:01PM
I joined facebook because people at work invited me. I never use it, cant even remember password, and always wondered what was so great about it anyway? I hav communicated with family and friends for years thru regular old emails, and I can send pics and anything else I guess can be done on FB. So it wont bother me to leave.
Janet AJun 3rd 2010 8:02AM
Gee, AOL doesn't like Facebook. Surprise, surprise ...
I have friends on facebook who I wouldn't be able to stay in touch with any other way -- long story, but true. I'm not quitting, I can deal with all the alleged privacy "problems" (frankly, what's FB doing that OpenID didn't?) and I like the site.