Because I used to work for an enterprise
feedback technology company, I’m always curious when a company puts out what it’s
pleased to call a survey. When Facebook does it, well…
This popped up in my feed last week, so I followed
it to see what exercise in pretend-voice-of-the-customer research they were on
about.
And, sure enough—here’s how they started out:
I mean—seriously?
That’s the kind of self-congratulatory piffle
you’d expect to come out of the current occupant of the White House.
They followed it up by asking for “my own words”,
as though they give a toss.
And then prompted me with their own words.
Note that that’s a radio-button response.
Meaning you can only choose one. Yes, they say “most important”, but how can
you pick just one way Facebook sucks?
Then they spent a lot of their own words reminding me of why I should have said they're fine, upstanding citizens of the world.
And that’s all, folks.
So—as I expected—they didn’t really want to
know what I (or any of their users) think of them or their platform; it’s just
an exercise in faux concern.
Just exactly like their response to every revelation
of their amoral douchebaggery over the years.
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