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Remember those Facebook “Dislike Button” scams? This time it’s real…

Zuck didn't say, but he did hint that maybe, just maybe, that long-awaited Dislike button is on the way...

Facebook’s Like button has become an integral part life on the social network.

But why no Dislike button?

Is it to keep a positive vibe in the Facebook ecosystem, so that you can inject a bit of cheer by just clicking a button, but need to take to the keyboard to have a dig at someone?

Is it because ad revenue might fall off on articles that are Disliked?

Is it to discourage cyberbullying?

Perhaps it’s because adding Dislike alongside the well-established Like button will turn them into little more than upvote/downvote toggles, and demean the emotional engagement that Like is supposed to convey?

Or maybe there’s no Dislike button in just the same way that reputable banks don’t sent you login links, as a scam-avoidance policy?

Indeed, the success – years ago, admittedly – of Dislike Button scams reminds us that Dislike is a feature that users would like to see, even though there’s not been any serious sign of it yet.

But that’s just changed.

In a recent Facebook Q&A session, an Egyptian Facebooker asked, as many others have asked in the past, whether the Like button would be getting any companions any time soon.

[From the floor] Q. This is one that seems to come up a lot when we have these Q&As, and it comes from Cairo, from Sayed... "Mark, we need to have more options than just the Like button. Why don't you have other options like, I'm sorry, Interesting, or Dislike."

Mark Zuckerberg’s answer?

A. You know, I think people have asked about the Dislike button for many years... And today is a special day, because it's the day where I actually get to say...

You can probably guess what’s coming next.

And you’d probably be wrong, because Zuck suddenly gets all coy, and falls back on:

...We're working on it.

Zuckerberg then spends a while saying – to be unkind, it’s actually two minutes of waffle – that it’s harder than you think to implement a Dislike button, but without explaining exactly why.

The Zuckster concludes with:

We have finally heard you! [Audience laughs] And we are working on this, and hopefully we will deliver something that meets your needs.

So, we still don’t know why Facebook doesn’t have a Dislike button, and we can’t yet be absolutely certain that it ever will.

But we’re betting that it’s going to happen.

And, do you know what?

In a way, we’ll be sorry.

We came up with our very own Dislike button more than four years ago, on a T-shirt to go with an open letter we wrote to the company, asking for the following:

1) PRIVACY BY DEFAULT

No more sharing of information without your 
users' express agreement. 

2) VETTED APP DEVELOPERS

Only vetted and approved third-party developers 
should be allowed to publish apps.

3) HTTPS FOR EVERYTHING

We welcome [your] HTTPS option, but you left 
it turned off by default.

t-shirt-500

Facebook didn’t quite implement all of those things as quickly or as vigorously as we might have liked, but it had a pretty good go at it, all the same.

Security and privacy seem to be a much bigger deal at Facebook these days; there are clear and extensive guidelines for App Reviews; and the company not only made HTTPS the default, but subsequently got rid of HTTP.

So our Dislike of 2011 rather pleasantly turned into a Like, and despite the occasional security and privacy glitch by Facebook since then, we haven’t seen any reason to turn the thumb downwards again like we did in 2011.

Let’s hope things stay that way, even if Dislike becomes an official way to respond to Facebook postings.

Of course, we know that not everyone has a positive view of Facebook’s security and privacy changes over the past few years.

Some people – even those who wouldn’t dream of closing their Facebook account – continue to give the company a surprisingly public and vocal “thumbs down.”

Where you do stand?

If Facebook put Like and Dislike buttons in the masthead of the website itself…

…which one would you click, and why?

HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE COMMENTS
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14 Comments

They don’t have a dislike button because Facebook is designed for businesses to market a ready-made Web site. Adding a dislike button is not likely to make those businesses happy that they could end up with a million dislikes on something they post. Adding it is geared more towards the average, non-paying Facebook user, not towards the paying business owner. It’s risky and not worth the risk.

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I can’t see any situation where adding a true “Dislike” button would be a good idea for Facebook. Yes the users want it, but, like you said, the businesses that use Facebook will not benefit from it. It’s so easy for 4chan or any of a number of sites to build a mob to downvote something into oblivion just for the lulz.
Just imagine a group like gamergate (or any tech-savvy extremists) having the power to downvote Facebook posts. They already mass downvote YouTube videos.

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Seemingly you can’t decide on HTTP or HTTPS either as this is the start of the link to the dislike button scam post.

“http://https//nakedsecurity.sophos.com…”

Naturally I asumed HTTPS ;).

As for a dislike button, there is already a way to show your dislike of a post, with the option to remove posts from your newsfeed. It takes more than a single click but achives the same thing, without harming the appearance of the post to those that do want to see it.

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Arrrgh. Fixed that, thanks. Don’t know how *that* happened :-)

It is indeed supposed to be “https”. You can visit Naked Security via an “http” link but it will redirect you via a TLS connection.)

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you should be aware that there is a new link going around and after reading this article I can see how the unsuspecting user will feel safe about clicking this link after reading your article

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Thanks for the heads-up! We’ve now written up the new scam campaign:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2015/09/21/guess-what-facebook-dislike-scams-are-back/

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I follow the reasoning, but it’s a bit demoralising when you report on FB that your pet cat has died, and all your friends give you a happy ‘Like’ !!!

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That’s actually one of the tricky bits about “Like” that Mark Zuckerberg mentioned in the Q&A – the clash between “I like that, it made me smile” and “I’d like to offer my most sincere condolences.” (But in the Dead Cat situation, “Dislike” would be even worse :-)

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I think davidbankson is correct. FB is not in the business of connecting people, fostering community, enabling communication, and the like, not really. It can do that, but that’s a byproduct; mainly it’s in business to make money. And if businesses and sponsored posts start getting “disliked,” their business model falls apart.

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Facebook free for years. I finally feel as if I can live life without feeling like i am missing something. It took about a year to a year and half before that feeling went 100% away.

I would click DISLIKE on everything… Facebook does not portray real life. Its all fake. Wake up, look around and send some real picture sin the mail to your family members.. they will be shocked when they can pull a picture out and look at it in real life.

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Dislike button will cause even more bullying and hatefulness. If they add a dislike button, I will be closing my account. Clicking the like button means, I’ve read it. Maybe they should change that wording.

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If anyone has shared the new bogus FaceBook Dislike Button “ENABLE” post with you PLEASE IGNORE IT. As I was trying to complete the steps by sharing it led me to a Malware installer page. Do not perpetuate this scam….when Facebook is ready the button will be available to everyone without any bogus process to enable it.

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Well said, and thanks for the alert. We have written this up here:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2015/09/21/guess-what-facebook-dislike-scams-are-back/

Reply

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