There are three network laws that describe three different perspectives on how networking works when it comes to value. These laws help lay out a calculation or a description of how a network can be valuable. The law that I agree with the most is the Reed's Law which talks about how social media plays a huge role in how valuable your network is.
Social media is taking over the way we communicate. If you don't have a Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or any of the other forms of social media, you are looked at as anti-social, weird, boring, or the typical "what do you have to hide"? The other networking laws have some type of calculation to determine the value of the network. Social media has a calculation of its own. The value of a network is determined by likes, comments, shares, favorites, retweets and follows.
The complexity in social media is the underlying reason in why people like or favorite something. Are they doing it because they truly like it? Are they doing it because that person is popular? Are they doing it because it was an accident? When you discover why someone is liking and sharing your posts on social media it is easier to post more things and get more likes. I couldn’t agree more that Reed’s Law is the way to determine value, especially in today’s time.
Going along with social media, I think that is the route we are headed in the future. We already get everything sent to our phone to notify us. I believe the notifications are just going to get worse and worse. Soon even if we don’t want information given to us we will receive it anyway. It is only a matter of time before information overload takes over. I think in the future we will be able to have access to any information we want in a matter of seconds. Of course, “any information we want” is very broad but I am talking about the things we search on Google, or look at on Facebook. Soon we will be able to receive information in a quick manner whether it is a new device that can deliver any information even if you don’t have a phone or revamping the phone to send information even faster. Our source of information is going to be instant, more instant than now.
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