Adam Sherwin, Media Correspondent
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From politicians to film stars, anyone who was anyone had a Facebook profile. But the social networking phenomenon may have peaked now that the number of British users of the site has fallen for the first time.
Analysts are speaking of “Facebook fatigue” after figures showed a 5 per cent decline from 8.9 million unique visitors to the website in December to 8.5 million last month. The fall could be a seasonal dip - Facebook’s audience is still 712 per cent higher than it was a year ago and 9 per cent higher than three months ago.
The actress Sienna Miller and the Tory MP Boris Johnson are Facebook members. Yet in the fickle world of internet “cool”, the popularity of the site, where users socialise, discuss their passions and exchange photographs, may have reached a plateau.
Facebook, which has an implied valuation of £7 billion after Microsoft took a minority stake, annoyed members last November by publicising details of their shopping habits without their permission.
Nic Howell, of the internet industry magazine New Media Age, said: “Social networking is as much about who isn’t on the site as who is. When Tory MPs and major corporations start profiles on Facebook its brand is devalued, driving its core user base into the arms of newer, more credible alternatives.”
Alex Burmaster, European internet analyst at Nielsen Online, which compiled the statistics, believes that Facebook users are finding that managing their virtual life too demanding. “There could be an element of Facebook-fatigue. While building up the number of friends and getting all the alerts was fun for a while, people are possibly finding it hard to manage their networks and the sheer amount of information/updates they now get from this network. For some of the early adopters the novelty has possibly worn off.” He added: “One month of falling audiences doesn’t spell the decline of Facebook or social networking. At some point its phenomenal growth rate would have to end and it’s simply a case of having reached that point.” Other social networking sites panel of nearly 40,000 internet users who have a meter attached to their suffered a decline during the last quarter, including MySpace, owned by News Corporation, the parent company of The Times, which was down 14 per cent and Bebo (8 per cent).
Networks on Yahoo! and Google-owned sites experienced falls of 16 cent and 30 per cent respectively, while Piczo, a site intended for teenagers, lost 56 per cent of its audience.
Nielsen predicted that the next generation of social network sites would cater to specific interests such as travel, business, or wealth. WAYN (Where Are You Now), a travel networking site, had a 25 per cent increase in its British audience in the past year to 461,000, and LinkedIn, a network for professional and business people, recorded a jump from 161,000 to 433,000 users.
Fears over the dissemination of personal information may be affecting Facebook. Members have been warned that they could become victims of identity fraud after giving personal details to strangers.
Neilsen found that 19.2 million (58 per cent of the active UK Internet population) visited a social networking site in January, with the average visitor spending 2 hours 26 minutes on it.
Facebook is being challenged by the BBC’s community web pages, which recorded a 21 per cent increase in the last quarter. The BBC said traffic to the pages was being driven by the popularity of its iPlayer “on demand” service, which has recorded 17 million programme downloads in seven weeks.
Nielsen Online's dtat comes from a panel off nearly 40,000 internet users who have a meter attached to thier computers
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I use facebook as it is simple and helps me keep in touch with my friends as I live in a different country now. I used to be on Myspace but with the interest in making your site look different to everyone elses is just annoying and take up to much valuable time. I have about 90 friends but unlike some people, they are all friends, some I haven't seen since school, so it is good to see what your friends are up to now. I hate all the stupid applications but I just ignore them all when requests come through. I go on it once a week and update my friends and whats going on if anything. It is just a shame that money has become involved in the online community world and the who is best will go on forever.
Tom, Waterford City,
The question is why do people need facebook and other such web-sites? Is it realistic to boast about having 100s of "friends". I can coun't the number of close friends I have on the fingers of my hands. The number of friends numbers around the 20-30s. Of course I have a number of aquaintances, but ultimately I am more than satisified with close friendships. Added to which, I would rather TALK to my friends in real-time (i.e. in the flesh) than "on-line". I spend enough time in front of a computer everyday...
Maybe the drop in numbers is the fact that people are realising that there is more to life than living in front of a computer and claiming to have 540 friends. What drivel.
Carlos, Basel, CH
Henry ... February hasn't finished. How do we know FB is up 13%?
Johng, Sydney, Australia
I have just left FaceBook (well they made me leave). Reason being I refused to have my real name as a user name (data protection and privacy issues). They found I was using a nickname and closed my account refusing to let me access it unless I stated my real name in full. Despite my offer to provide my real name provided they keep it private and let me instead use a username (as most other sites do), they point blank refused and I can no longer use FaceBook. So back to MySpace I guess who at least have some provision for those who don't wish to state their real names on the internet. With such lack of respect for customers privacy, I'm not surprised if they lose out to the competition in the long run.
Spongie, George Town,
Whilst these numbers correlate well with Facebook's own "Active Users" count, they fail to note that the same figures show an increase of 13% on Facebook from Jan to Feb - I guess that's next month's report...?
Henry Elliss, London,
more unfair competition from the beeb ?
first it damages facebook with its reporting of "security" then it has its own version for people to use!
danny carr, london,