Facebook Shuts Down @Facebook Email System 149
First time accepted submitter beaker_72 writes "The BBC are reporting that Facebook will end their email system which provided users an @Facebook.com email address in March. The official line from Facebook is that not many people have been using the service. Is that really the case or have they found it too challenging to monetize that part of their service? Did users stay away from this 'service' because they've become more savvy and recognized it for what it was — another way to harvest their data? Or is it the case that the market is currently saturated with free webmail services and there wasn't room for another one?"
Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm guessing that since FB requires an existing E-mail address to sign up, having @facebook.com would be redundant... not to mention the lack of a really decent E-mail client.
Lack of marketing (Score:5, Insightful)
How many people even know they had a free @facebook.com email address?
Could it be because of access issues? (Score:5, Insightful)
I would think most people have little use for an e-mail address that cannot be accessed from work.
Re:Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
What's really annoying about it is the way they started by forcing people to use it as their contact address, and then those people suckered by their abuse now have people trying to reach them with a now-inactive system.
It's the same basic problem with any website that tries to force it's "neat new features" on users. Youtube and googleplus is a similar thing. When google plus inevitably fails(and it will), they're going to have to go through an elaborate shutdown process that impinges on all the other google services people use.
The point I'm trying to make(and no it won't reach anyone that needs to hear it, Dice) is to stop pretending your existing userbase will love and use your new services just because you tell them to.
Re: Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, judging by the popularity of Gmail, people being concerned with their data being harvested doesn't seem to be a concern at all. I think it was just plain executed badly.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Email is an alternative to facebook (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, the email-facebook dichotomy really describes the changes in the web over the last few years.
Standardized tech-based distributed solution without central planning to centralized, secretive, over-advertized, manipulative hyper-corporate sites.
SEO and web 2.0 were poison pills that are killing the actual utility of the internet as a collection of content and systems in favor of "content providers" like facebook.
Re: Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
Many users have been stung over the years by changing ISP and losing their email address. Or by not changing ISP, but their ISP changing their name and their email address going out the window.
I think most people have a hard time seeing Google or Gmail disappearing from the face of the internet. And for those that are concerned, they can use their own domain on Gmail.
However users may be less certain of Facebook's long term position. After all, look at where ICQ, MySpace, LiveJournal and the others are today. Maybe this is just a recognition by Facebook's own user base that they're happy to stick around for so long as Facebook is where things are happening, but that they have no great ties to the site and don't necessarily want to create them either.
Re: Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
Gmail took off because its interface was so much better than anyone else's webmail. I got my present webmail address when I kept losing my address when changing ISPs. Since I can use Thunderbird for a client for it, why in thw world would I want to change it? Especially since there's not only no compelling reason to, there's no reason to at all.
Re:Because people already have E-mail addresses? (Score:5, Insightful)
What I don't like is Google trying to force me to make a Google+ account, and even get a little sneaky about it.
Re:Professional Email Address (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you also judge people by whether or not their home address is in a fashionable neighborhood? Whether their 'casual Friday' shirt comes from L.L. Bean or Wal-Mart?
Seriously, I imagine there are more inane and shallow things to just people on than their email address... but it can't be a long list.
Re:Email is an alternative to facebook (Score:5, Insightful)
Until this story, I didn't know anyone who remembered that Facebook email was a thing.
Re:Professional Email Address (Score:3, Insightful)
The amazing thing is that, like all people with ignorant biases, you actually think these are reasonable statements.