The financial news
has been all atwitter (no, don’t pardon the pun) with the initial public
offering of Facebook. The company is a
natural monopoly, meaning that the economics of social networks mean that only
one company should exist, there is no need for duplication and
competition. As a natural monopoly, and
an unregulated one at that it is natural to assume that Facebook has a rather high
value. And it does.
But what about the
product it produces. The National Review is
the publication started by the late William F. Buckley, and it mostly sets out
the inane right wing views of its heritage.
But surprisingly its
take by Editor Rich Lowry on Facebook is right on. (Thanks to David
Frum’ blog for this one)
If time be of all things the most
precious,” Benjamin Franklin said, “wasting time must be the greatest
prodigality.” But he had never heard of a status update.
Facebook is the
world’s foremost purveyor of information you shouldn’t care about. Facebook founder
Mark Zuckerberg is to uselessness what Henry Ford was
to the automobile. He has mastered it on an industrial scale and is riding it
to a vast fortune. At more than $100 billion, the valuation of Facebook equals
the annual GDP of Morocco or Vietnam ,
countries that don’t top anyone’s list of economic powerhouses, but do actually
produce some things of value.
Can 900 million
people, the roughly one-eighth of the planet that uses Facebook, be wrong? If
they are passing around photos of pets in party costumes, telling us whether
they are having a good or bad hair day, and playing the farming-simulation game
FarmVille, the answer is, “Why, yes they can!”
Facebook has
transformed oversharing from an annoying habit of the poorly socialized into
the very stuff of daily interactions. No thought is too banal, no event too
minor, no mood too passing, no photo too embarrassing to be posted on Facebook.
One of the great self-regarding egotists of all time, the late author Norman
Mailer, might have blanched at the unrelenting self-exposure of it.
Does that sum it
up or what! The phrase Mark Zuckerberg is to uselessness what Henry Ford was
to the automobile is
surely one that should live in the Phrase Hall of Fame.
As for the question
of whether or not an individual should buy the Facebook shares, there are
probably more than 10,000 opinions available on that issue. And while there has been no categorical count
of the positions in those opinions, one can safely assume that between 40% and
60% of them advise buying the stock meaning between 60% and 40% advise not
buying the stock.
Ultimately everyone
will know whether or not buying the stock was a smart move. This means that 4,000 to 6,000 of those
opinions will have been dead right, and the authors will crow about their
expertise, when in fact the law of large numbers and pure dumb luck is really
the cause of their accuracy.
As to the question
of whether or not one should actually buy the stock, here is the correct answer.
I don’t know, you don’t know and no one
knows
Not that hard, was it.
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