Andreessen and Dyson on Facebook

Really smart company research has always been hard to find, and today it’s

getting harder. On the one hand, many sell-side institutions are scaling back

their equity-research operations, and encouraging what analysts remain to spend

more time on the phone to high-value clients, and less time writing research

reports for the masses. On the other hand, there are thousands of bloggers with

opinions about individual companies, but it’s very hard to separate out the

signal from the noise.

Occasionally, however, the blogosphere comes up with the kind of analysis that

any highly-paid analyst would be incredbily proud of. In the past couple of

days, we’ve seen both Marc Andreessen and Esther Dyson

publish their takes on Facebook freely on the web, without any kind of corporate

firewall or conflict of interest. If you’re interested in the direction that

the web is going, both of these are must-read pieces.

Andreessen

says that "the new Facebook Platform is a dramatic leap forward for the

Internet industry," while Dyson

is thinking even bigger:

Facebook supports the attention economy — as opposed to the purchase intention

economy. Mark Zuckerberg said to me long ago (paraphrase): "The other

guys think the purpose of communication is to get information. We think the

purpose of information is to foster communication."

Think of Facebook not so much as information exchange as a place where you

can establish and spread your presence, and get attention back. That’s the

currency of the future … and it may or may not be directly exchangeable

for money.

Of course, Facebook isn’t a public company (yet), so all of this analysis is

hard to monetize. But if you’re interested in the future of the technology space,

increasingly blog entries are at the top of the required-reading list.

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