I don’t like Facebook, but my mother and my father-in law both have facebooks. I tried some different social medias but I can’t make my mom go because the social medias are from other countries and stuff. Are there any American social medias where my mom would feel comfortable putting her face on?

I usually don’t put my face on social medias, sometimes I’ll put a photo of a guy who kind of looks like me, and choose a photo that’s taken from really far away, and people who don’t know me that well will think it’s me. My mom likes to put a headshot and then pixilated photos of the American flag and quotes from celebrity women she likes. That’s kind of a facebook thing. Are there any social medias like that?

Merry Christmas to all the Christians. I’m not Christian, so I get to be here. See you after church. I get to enjoy myself, and you’re in uncomfortable clothing, hahaha.

  • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Lol, you don’t. There’s a whole bunch of reasons they enjoy Facebook that you can’t replicate outside of it with privacy respecting social media. Mainly, all their friends and other pages they interact with already on Facebook.

    This is a pretty frequent question in privacy spaces. The best you can do is manage your own, and maybe talk to them about the risks. Maybe. If they’re open to it.

  • 9point6@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    You unfortunately are coming at the problem from the wrong direction.

    The only social network they will want to use is the one with all their friends on it; and for the older generations, that’s basically just Facebook.

    In order to get them to move you’d need to get their friends to move, and in order to get their friends to move, you’ll need to get their friends to also move. It’s called the network effect and it’s why it’s incredibly hard for any non-established social networks to gain much of a market share.

    Your best bet (which is by no means a guarantee) is to wait for the latest Facebook scandal to be in the news, and chat to them about it whilst they’re watching it on TV. Plus add a bit more fuel by doing the ol’ “oh this reminds me of something else I was reading a couple of months ago…” And have some other recent scandals in your back pocket to fire out. Bonus points if you can already establish yourself on something like Friendica, which will allow you to say “yeah I quit Facebook a while ago, the company running it just seems skeevy, I’ve been using friendica instead for a bit now” or something like that

    Then you have to hope that registers enough as a talking point amongst them and their friends that it sticks. But you have an uphill struggle ahead with no certainty of success.

    • Today@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      It’s not the friends. It’s the distant family that you never see but still want to know about births, deaths, etc. It’s the neighborhood groups that tell you when your package gets delivered to the wrong house. Its the city groups that tell you why the railroad crossing is closed and which house has the best Halloween decorations.

      • 9point6@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Well I’d lean on the shoulder of giants in terms of the actual service and not do it completely from scratch given we’ve got Facebook-likes in the fediverse, you could suggest to them. But basically yes from a network perspective unfortunately

        Although you have given me an idea for an angle that the fediverse is perfect for: set up an instance for your local area

        That allows you to also do the “screw untrustworthy big tech, keep things local with people you know” kind of angle.

        Also obviously a fair bit of work, and you still have to ultimately convince people to use it, but worth highlighting regardless.

  • mulcahey@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Unfortunately there is only one way to get older generations onto a new app: make it the only place where they can see pictures of their grandkids

    (I’m serious tho. When you have kids you can get their grandparents to install ANYTHING if you tell them it has pics of the new baby.)

  • 0xtero@beehaw.org
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    3 months ago

    It’s a fool’s errand unfortunately. Users stay in spaces because their friends and social circles are there. It doesn’t really matter how shitty the platform becomes. The social cost of moving is just too high.

    The solution is interoperability and some regulation. Unfortunately we have neither. All you can do is inform your mom about the dangers and teach her to recognise propaganda and abuse.

    Would recommend reading Cory Doctorow’s book ”Enshittification”

  • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    I just told my extended family how they can contact me, and accepted that I’d be out of the loop on some things.

      • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        Ignore Facebook but install Signal on her phone and start sharing your life via pictures to a group or use the “stories” feature? It takes effort but parents want to see whats going on.

      • doodoo_wizard@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        Then use facebook. Go where the people you want to be around are.

        Just recognize that all the stuff you put on social media is public.