Facebook is the source of many people's social life. Some use it for work purposes, others use it for school, others use it as a way to escape from the real world. Facebook offers many people a convenient way to keep in touch with people. It provides several ways of communication, which creates a stronger link. It has games that can now be shared among members; for example, I can chat with my sister when I play the Uno game together. We are sharing each other and having fun while chasing, so this relationship will be even stronger.
Identity management Facebook is already one of the largest and most important identity management services in the world. But it only serves one entity: Facebook. The company has a big opportunity to become a de facto platform for global identity, but only if it manages confidential identity data in a truly neutral way. I implied this model in the last article and promises to extend it in future articles. But now it should be done. The way of thinking is simple. Separating Facebook from Other Countries After we separate the walls, we will build a platform that enables us to control the data. This not only brings valuable value to Facebook, but also the whole world
Improve ID management. Currently, you can log in to millions of websites using Facebook credentials. But beyond that, Facebook's identity system did not do much. If you can convert the entire Internet into your own private menstruation centered on Facebook, Facebook can cover more areas. Block Chain In essence, block chain technology creates value by utilizing network effects. Recent Telecom ICOs have only 100 million users in mobile applications. I expect to increase the number of existing Web publishing tokens, and build a block chain ecosystem. Here, Facebook will develop its own positioning like Ethereum. Allowing developers access to billions of Facebook users is a great motivation for using Facebook block chain as the foundation of the application.
How about Facebook? Many observers say the battle over online identity is over and Facebook has won. People use their Facebook ID to log in to services on the Internet. Why do they need something like Okta? "My idea is that people have their own identity," McKinnon told me. "Tools that help to unify identities will be offered by people, not advertising companies." That is exactly what Okta is a boring business. The age of this technology was formed by large companies that have solved major problems, provided solutions to consumers free of charge, and then devised ways to sell them in the back end. With today's mainstream ad support service, the price is correct, but you do not doubt that someone is staring at you. I will decide whether I will sell your email address or show you some shoes.