A couple weeks back, I said I wouldn’t be deleting Facebook just because they played fast and loose with my “personal” data.

That doesn’t mean I like Facebook, I just don’t like getting worked up over nonsense involving “data.”

Founder Mark Zuckercorn has famously said Facebook will always be free. Realistically, free should be in quotes: “free.”

In reality, the platform is a pay-to-play site.

As of this writing, I have 2,025 followers on Facebook. That’s out of 2,148 people on my Facebook page. It’s not a lot of people, but I’m not famous.

When I post something—a link, a meme, what have you—Facebook tracks it. Over the course of the day, I’ll see “Your post has gone into 300 feeds.”

300 feeds, out of 2,025 who have actively clicked “Follow Nathan.”

Seems odd.

Then I’ll get a notice: “Boost this post!”

That’s Facebook asking me to give them some money in order to put the post into more feeds.

Suddenly the “300 feeds” makes sense. Facebook is actively holding my post back, hoping I’ll pay them to show it to more people. People, again, who have already said they want to see my stupidity.

I don’t expect Facebook to throw my posts willy-nilly across their whole platform. But if someone clicks “follow,” you’d think my nonsense would appear in their timeline.

Well, I bit the bullet and sponsored a few posts. “Why not build my base?” I figured.

When you click “boost,” you get options regarding who should see said post. You can target people, which makes sense. That’s why Facebook data exists. You see who’s a certain age, who’s into comedy, who likes things similar to you, and you target them.

That’s how Cambridge Analytica used Facebook data. “Are you clinically insane, or just flat-out stupid? Neat! You’ll like this post designed to make you want to vote for an incompetent moron!”

So, fair enough.

But the next “boost” option bothers me: your followers.

I have people following me, who want to see my garbage in their feed, people that have already said, “show me what this idiot is up to.” I’m supposed to advertise to them?

Suddenly the notification “Your post went into 300 feeds” out of 2,000 followers is irritating. Paying for something you should already have is like… well, paying for something you already have.

(I’m bad at analogies.)

Basically, Facebook is like a discount airline. The ticket is cheap, but if you want to carry a bag on with you (or have your post appear in the feed of your followers), there are surcharges aplenty.

It’s why I always put, “Hey, if you like this blog, click that ‘share’ button, yo.”

It helps.

And, truth be told, I’d rather have people who actively like my unique brand of dumb sharing it, then buying my way forward. It feels more honest.

Maybe I’m old fashioned, or maybe I’m just Mary Tyler Moore.

Hopefully I’ll make it after all.

Lookie-lookie, I wrote a bookie. Give a click and check it out.