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Facebook Is Using Your Profile to Track Global Urban Migration Trends

31 pointsby kracaloover 11 years ago

8 comments

jeffjoseover 11 years ago
I'm sure the discussion will soon slip to "OMG, Facebook has data and its gonna do evil things". That's a valid point, but I hope people here see the amount of information we now know about _us_, that equips for more informed decisions of tomorrow.
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ihswover 11 years ago
Google&#x27;s Moto G seems a lot more interesting now -- their marketing effort has been summarized as &quot;getting the next 1 billion people online.&quot;<p>This alludes to anticipating urban migration and knowing 1) who moves where 2) when they move. This can be very interesting and (in most cases) frighteningly accurate advertisement information.
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f_salmonover 11 years ago
Tracking urban migration trends?<p>The temptation that none of the big data hoover companies (Google, Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, Yahoo, etc.) will be able to resist is something else:<p>When you have so much data on everybody, you have created yourself a situation that allows you to &quot;hack the system&quot; to your advantage and the disadvantage of those who don&#x27;t have all that data. You can analyze the trends that the data shows and link them to the movements of the stock exchange, and you&#x27;re all set for infinite passive income and domination - now you know before everybody else what to buy and what to sell and when (you can call it &quot;insider trading based on data&quot;).<p>Now, if you, as the user want to supply all that data, that&#x27;s up to you. If so, you&#x27;ll not only be appreciated by those companies but by certain government agencies as well.
taliesinbover 11 years ago
My team and I did an analysis on our Facebook dataset recently that might (or might not) have inspired this particular work.<p>You can find the geographic analysis within this blog post:<p><a href="http://blog.stephenwolfram.com/2013/04/data-science-of-the-facebook-world/" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.stephenwolfram.com&#x2F;2013&#x2F;04&#x2F;data-science-of-the-f...</a><p>There is a much higher resolution version of the &quot;migration wheel&quot; available here:<p><a href="http://www.wired.co.uk/magazine/archive/2013/12/start/facebook-migration-station" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wired.co.uk&#x2F;magazine&#x2F;archive&#x2F;2013&#x2F;12&#x2F;start&#x2F;facebo...</a>
eftpotrmover 11 years ago
From that data? It&#x27;s way too basic.<p>Mine isn&#x27;t completed, partly because the real friends know it and the casual acquaintances don&#x27;t need it, but if it were? Well, I can&#x27;t tell them where I&#x27;m from with any precision. I grew up in four different towns, none particularly close to the others, went back to one for University (well, sort of - a stint in each of two towns in a conurbation), moved to a fifth for work, currently live in a sixth but will probably move to a seventh later this year - and I don&#x27;t expect that move to be a &#x27;forever&#x27; home.<p>So, Facebook, where am I from?
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freehunterover 11 years ago
I really wish this was interactive. I clicked through to the article directly from Facebook, but it was still static images. It&#x27;s hard to follow the lines when there are a bunch of them overlapping.
Tychoover 11 years ago
Does that give them enough of an edge to make a killing in the property market? (by investing in up-and-coming areas before everyone else catches on)
scrrrover 11 years ago
And their users are giving them their data for free, in exchange for being able to get a daily does of &quot;Like&quot;-events, so that we can feel validated I guess?