On Sept. 5, 2006, Mark Zuckerberg changed the way that Facebook worked, and in the process he inspired a revolt. Zuckerberg, a doe-eyed 24-year-old C.E.O., founded Facebook in his dorm room at Harvard two years earlier, and the site quickly amassed nine million users.
Type "why am I" into a Google search and autocomplete will suggest "why am I here?" Type "why did" and you'll find "why did I get married?" These questions seem so hackneyed, the kind of generic lamentations you might hear in a bad movie.
This week, Twitterers around the world received some devastating news: The Twitter account @ Horse_ebooks, a cult favorite, was human after all. For years, @Horse_ebook's over 200,000 avid followers had been convinced its sometimes poetic, often nonsensical, frequently hilarious tweets had been the musings of a spambot created to elude Twitter's spam detectors and peddle books about horses.