The successor of Facebook: Nextdoor is expanding to France to connect neighbors

Prorootect

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Faceboocaust: The successor of Facebook is named: Nextdoor
Nextdoor is expanding to France to connect neighbors
techcrunch.com: Nextdoor is expanding to France to connect neighbors

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After a slow and steady expansion across the U.S., social platform Nextdoor is now launching its fourth country outside of its home country. Nextdoor is a sort of tiny Facebook for neighborhoods. It’s a good way to connect with your neighbors, exchange tips, buy and sell things and more.

“The launch of Nextdoor in France represents a critical step in our continued European expansion. The value in connecting people to what matters most to them locally transcends national boundaries, and we are thrilled that our initial tests were received with great enthusiasm,” Nextdoor co-founder and CEO Nirav Tolia said. “We look forward to playing a role in helping neighbors across France utilize Nextdoor to make local connections every day that strengthen communities.”

On paper, Nextdoor sounds like the perfect platform for sprawling suburbs in the U.S. But the company thinks big European cities are also going to use it. That’s why the company is now live in the Netherlands, the U.K., Germany and now France.
Nextdoor users buy and sell desks and bikes, find babysitters and veterinarians, get together for block parties or to run together. If you’re looking for a drill or you’ve lost your dog, maybe other Nextdoor users can help you.
You need to reach a certain scale to turn Nextdoor into a useful platform. The company knows how to launch new neighborhoods with enough users to make them come back and find the service useful. So you can expect to see ads and flyers in the coming weeks.
The startup is still much bigger in the U.S. than in Europe. There are over 165,000 active neighborhoods in the U.S., which represents 90 percent of Nextdoor neighborhoods in the company’s five countries.

Each neighborhood has 1,200 households on average. So that means Nextdoor has millions and millions of users. And the company has raised hundreds of millions of dollars in total. With that much funding, it’s going to make it easier to compete with Mesvoisins in France.
People are getting tired of general purpose social networks, such as Facebook. The backlash is real, and it’s a good opportunity for smaller, more focused social networks. There’s also a feel-good effect with local connections. It’s nice to see your neighbors helping each other...
 

Prorootect

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I salute the 1 million North Americans who ditched Facebook last quarter
thenextweb.com: I salute the 1 million North Americans who ditched Facebook last quarter

Facebook made a startling revelation today: for the first time ever, it lost a million users in the US and Canada in Q4 2017, bringing its North American base down to 184 million.
That’s not a huge number in the grand scheme of things – and heck, Facebook even saw an increase in daily user audience by 32 million last quarter – but it indicates that people are actively leaving the social network and freeing themselves from its shackles to lead a better life.
Why are people quitting Facebook? The rise of fake news, meddling by Russian agencies, and plenty of content in your feed that you don’t remember subscribing to may all be to blame.
The drop in users could also help explain Facebook’s recent moves to fix its machinery – it’s promised to surface more content from your contacts instead of from brands and publishers, it’s trying to crowdsource help to identify trusted media outlets, it’s working to bring you more local news so you’re better connected to your community, it’s blocking cryptocurrency ads that may be misleading, and it says that it’s showing fewer viral videos, which has caused time spent on the site to drop by 50 million hours a day – all in an effort to make people’s time spent on the social network more meaningful.
In keeping an eye on these developments, while also becoming acutely aware of my app addiction over the past several months, I’ve been trying to break away from services like Facebook that have become less valuable to me, and more of a time suck. I haven’t yet been able to kick the habit: the site’s Events section is arguably the best resource for finding things to do, and as much as I hate to admit it, I’m still interested in discovering whether my notifications include comments or photos from friends that I’d care to check out.
And it’s not just a matter of choosing to distance yourself from Facebook, because the network doesn’t make it easy: try abstaining for a few days or weeks, and the company will fill your inbox with messages inviting you to come back and check out what’s going on with your pals, and even with alerts from its security customer service department, asking if you’ve been having help logging in.

So, to those one million Americans who’ve moved away from Facebook: I salute you for breaking free and moving on with your life...

-read MORE on the website...
 
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Prorootect

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Nov 5, 2011
5,855
Facebook is not one of my vices. I have enough ways to waste my time without it.
Do something concrete, positive and good for others (people, animals, plants...) EVERY day - then this day will not be lost and you will have great satisfaction! You'd be happy, reassured, cause you're not being selfish.
voila
 
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