0 — Facebook
In 2026, we may look back at the “Like” button the way we look at a fax machine: once essential, now eccentric. The zero movement suggests that the most radical digital act today is not adding another app—but taking one away until you reach zero.
| | Zero-Facebook Solution | |---|---| | Messaging | Signal / iMessage / WhatsApp (owned by Meta, but encrypted) | | Events | Partiful (invite-only) / Doodle / text chain | | Photos sharing | Tinybeans (families) / Photo circle (Google Photos) | | News & interests | RSS (Feedly) + newsletter (Substack) + podcasts | | Professional network | LinkedIn (use only in browser, no app) | 0 facebook
In 2004, “The Facebook” was an exclusive digital playground for Harvard students. By 2012, it became a global utility—as essential to modern life as email or a phone number. In 2024, a quiet but accelerating movement suggests the opposite: In 2026, we may look back at the