I. Introduction: Surveyors, Social Media, and the Illusion of Connection
Once upon a timeâthough not so long agoâsocial media arrived with a promise that felt revolutionary: connection. Platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter (now X) vowed to bring professionals together, collapsing distance, breaking down communication barriers, and making it easier than ever to share knowledge. And for the land surveying professionâan industry built on collaboration, mentorship, and collective experienceâit sounded like the perfect fit. Finally, a place to swap stories from the field, troubleshoot technical problems, and pass down hard-earned knowledge from one generation to the next.
But what surveyors got instead wasnât connection. It was extraction.
Today, Facebook and its competitors are less a gathering place for professionals and more a digital graveyardâa place where the knowledge of thousands of surveyors is mined, monetized, and buried by platforms designed not to preserve expertise, but to harvest it. Every shared thread, every detailed equipment breakdown, every hard-won legal interpretation becomes another data point in a machine optimized for engagement and profit, not preservation or education.
Surveyors post photos, videos, case studies, and questions, believing they are contributing to a living knowledge base. What actually happens is simplerâand more sinister. That content is scraped by algorithms, indexed for ad targeting, and then rapidly buried under a tidal wave of newer, less meaningful content. The average lifespan of a post on Facebook is a matter of hoursâafter that, it might as well not exist. And unlike a library or an archive, there is no system in place to resurface the valuable knowledge that slips beneath the waves.
Whatâs worse is the illusion of ownership social media creates. Surveyors often assume that because they posted it, because their name is on it, that the information is somehow theirs. But the fine print tells a different story. Anything posted to these platforms becomes the property of the platformâto be used, repurposed, sold, or deleted at will. Years of field experience, hard-earned knowledge, historic photos, best practicesâthey all disappear into the data vaults of companies like Meta, whose only loyalty is to their shareholders.
And while surveyors build this digital treasure trove for free, the platforms quietly get rich. Worse still, AI companies increasingly scrape this dataâyes, including those equipment specs, boundary law discussions, and RTK drone tipsâto train the very models being designed to replace licensed professionals. It's happening in real-time. What was meant to educate peers is now being used to automate the profession itself.
That is where Land Surveyors United comes inânot just as a platform, but as a response. A living archive designed by surveyors, for surveyors, LSU is everything Facebook isnât: searchable, preservable, and owned by the very community it serves. It is structured not for clicks, not for likes, but for the long haulâfor education, mentorship, and legacy.
The argument is simple: surveyors cannot afford to keep giving their knowledge away to companies designed to exploit it. What we share should be preserved, not buried. What we know should build the profession, not Big Techâs AI models. And the only way forward is to choose our own platform, our own archive, and our own future.
II. The Data Extraction Problem: How Social Media Companies Farm Surveyors for Profit
For most surveyors, posting online feels harmlessâanother photo from the field, another equipment tip shared, another conversation about changing regulations or best practices. But behind the screens, a far more calculated process is unfolding. Platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram arenât neutral spaces for knowledge sharingâtheyâre data extraction machines, designed to mine every interaction for profit. And in the case of land surveyors, the extraction isnât just personalâitâs professional, technical, and potentially devastating to the industry itself.
At the core of the problem is the business model of surveillance capitalism. Social media companies donât make money from providing a service; they profit by turning the activity of their users into data streams they can sell, analyze, or use to improve their own products. Every discussion about GNSS accuracy, every thread about drone surveying workflows, every photo of field setups or right-of-way monuments becomes part of a massive datasetâa digital goldmine for advertisers, marketers, and increasingly, artificial intelligence developers.
Surveyors are especially vulnerable because the technical knowledge they share online is highly specializedâand highly valuable. Every time a surveyor explains the calibration of a total station, breaks down the pitfalls of a particular mapping software, or discusses the shifting legal standards around boundary law, they are feeding that knowledge into a system designed to commodify it. Platforms collect that data not for the benefit of the community, but to enhance ad targeting, generate engagement, and develop AI models that can replicate or replace professional work.
And itâs already happening. AI developers are scraping social media for real-world examples of surveying challenges, workflows, and solutions. What starts as a well-intentioned conversation about GNSS correction factors in a Facebook group becomes training data for machine learning models designed to power automated mapping tools. The irony is brutalâsurveyors are unknowingly teaching the algorithms that may soon be sold back to the market as âsmart surveying solutions,â cutting surveyors themselves out of the process.
Even worse, there is no transparency or compensation. The platforms donât notify users that their content is being harvested. Surveyors donât get a percentage of the profits when their knowledge helps refine AI. The intellectual property of the profession is being stripped away, commercialized, and weaponized against the very people who created it.
This is not a hypothetical futureâitâs happening now. Tech giants like Google, Amazon, and Apple routinely scrape public web content to improve their mapping technologies and AI-driven spatial models. Theyâre using surveying conversations, images, and technical insightsâsourced from social mediaâto refine systems that could one day replace licensed professionals altogether.
What makes this extraction even more dangerous is that itâs invisible. Thereâs no notification when your drone calibration post becomes part of a training dataset. No alert when your right-of-way easement discussion gets mined for keywords. Surveyors are being robbed in broad daylight, their expertise sucked into an algorithmic black hole where it benefits everyone except the profession itself.
If surveyors continue down this roadâsharing freely on platforms built for exploitationâthey risk becoming the unpaid R&D department for the very companies that will replace them. The profession needs to recognize whatâs at stake: this isnât just about losing control of your photos or your comments. Itâs about losing control of the professionâs collective knowledge baseâforever.
III. The Lost Archive: Why Facebook Is a Terrible Repository for Surveying Knowledge
On the surface, Facebook groups look like bustling communitiesâthousands of members, posts pouring in daily, lively discussions, and photos from the field. To the casual observer, it feels like knowledge is being shared, preserved, and passed on. But that illusion collapses under scrutiny. The hard truth is this: Facebook and similar social platforms are fundamentally incapable of serving as a true archive for the surveying profession.
The reason is simpleâthey were never designed to preserve knowledge. Social media platforms thrive on immediacy, novelty, and fleeting engagement. Their algorithms are engineered to prioritize what is new, viral, or emotionally chargedânot what is technically sound, historically important, or professionally valuable. A detailed post explaining GNSS vertical accuracy pitfalls may get a few comments, but within hours it is buried under memes, job site photos, or arguments about equipment brands. By the end of the week, itâs functionally invisible, lost to the endless scroll.
Try searching Facebook for a conversation you know happenedâperhaps a year-old thread breaking down the differences in state boundary law interpretations. Itâs gone. Not deletedâjust unrecoverable, buried under layers of newer content. Facebookâs search function is weak, its organization non-existent, and its priorities entirely opposed to professional preservation. It is a feed, not a library.
For a profession like surveying, where context, history, and precision matter, this is catastrophic. Technical discussions, equipment hacks, legal clarificationsâthese are not fleeting conversations. They are knowledge assets. They deserve to be referenced, cited, built upon, and carried forward. Instead, they are tossed onto the algorithmic bonfire of engagement-driven content, never to be seen again.
Consider how traditional knowledge transfer in surveying has worked for generations: apprenticeships, mentorship, professional journals, published case studies, and permanent archives of legal precedent. These systems ensured that what one generation learned became the foundation for the next. Social media obliterates that model. It encourages reactivity, not reflection. It amplifies spectacle, not substance.
A perfect example: six months ago, a seasoned surveyor shared a comprehensive step-by-step guide in a Facebook group on RTK drone calibration in complex urban environments. The post was detailed, precise, and hard-won knowledge from years in the field. For a few days, it sparked comments and praise. But today, try finding itâitâs gone. Buried under meme wars, âwhatâs this equipmentâ photos, and another debate about which total station brand reigns supreme. That guide? Might as well never have existed.
And hereâs the kickerâeven if you could find it, Facebook owns it now. That knowledge isnât preserved for the profession. Itâs sitting in a server farm, available for data mining, AI scraping, or deletion at the platformâs discretion. Surveyors are pouring their collective knowledge into a system designed to profit from engagementânot protect professional expertise.
Meanwhile, the profession suffers. Younger surveyors duplicate work, repeat mistakes, and miss out on historical context because they simply canât access the knowledge that already exists. The wheel is reinvented dailyânot because surveyors are lazy, but because the platform makes building on past knowledge impossible.
This is where Land Surveyors United stands apart. LSU is not a feed; it is a structured, searchable, living archiveâbuilt to ensure that when a surveyor shares expertise, it stays shared. LSU threads donât disappear. Equipment guides, legal discussions, and case studies are preserved, categorized, and ready to serve the next generation of professionals.
Surveying is a profession that builds on what came before. Facebook ensures we forget. If the community continues relying on platforms designed for erasure, the profession risks losing not just its historyâbut its future.
IV. The Myth of the 'Surveyor Community' on Social Media
One of the most seductive lies social media tells is the idea that it fosters âcommunity.â Facebook groups with names like Surveyors United Worldwide or Global Surveying Professionals give the impression of a thriving, collaborative network. Thousands of members, daily posts, lively comment threadsâit looks like a profession gathered in one digital space, learning from each other and growing stronger together.
But peel back that glossy façade and what you find isnât communityâitâs content churn. These groups are not designed to build lasting relationships, preserve knowledge, or deepen the craft. They are engagement factories, where the goal is not to foster expertise but to keep users scrolling, clicking, and commentingâfeeding the platformâs algorithm, not the professionâs future.
The illusion of community is further shattered when you analyze what actually gets engagement in these spaces. Posts that go viral are rarely the detailed technical breakdowns, case studies, or legal discussions that move the profession forward. Instead, itâs memes, field photos with dramatic backstories, or equipment fails that rack up likes and comments. A surveyor could post a rigorous analysis of boundary law changesâonly to watch it sink with three likesâwhile a blurry photo of a total station on a cliff edge pulls in hundreds of reactions and shares.
Why? Because Facebookâs algorithm rewards content that triggers emotional responsesâsurprise, humor, outrageânot professional insight. The posts that matter most to the profession are the least likely to be seen, shared, or remembered. Meanwhile, what dominates the collective memory of these groups is what the platform deems most profitable to promoteânot what is most valuable to the craft.
This is not community. It is a distraction machineâa system that fragments professional identity instead of uniting it. Surveyors begin to see each other not as fellow experts, but as content producers competing for fleeting attention. Over time, this changes the way knowledge is shared: complex topics are dumbed down, disagreements are avoided for fear of killing engagement, and meaningful conversations are replaced by a steady stream of likes and laughs.
More dangerously, this myth of community gives surveyors a false sense of security. They believe theyâre connected, that theyâre participating in the professionâs collective future. But the truth is, their knowledge is being scattered, lost, or worseâextracted and sold. While surveyors debate the latest meme, AI developers, data brokers, and ad companies quietly harvest everything of value, training systems designed to replicate or replace professional expertise.
The proof is everywhere: ask yourself when the last time was that a major issueâlike the defunding of NOAA, the assault on licensure, or the commodification of geospatial dataâsparked sustained action from one of these groups. The answer, almost always, is never. Because social mediaâs version of âcommunityâ canât organize, canât advocate, and canât protect the profession. It can only distract.
Contrast that with a true community platform like Land Surveyors United, where conversations are archived, revisited, and built upon. Where expertise is valued over virality. Where the goal is not engagement for engagementâs sake, but the preservation and strengthening of the profession.
If surveyors continue mistaking algorithm-driven groups for real community, theyâll wake up one day to find the professionâs center of gravity shiftedânot towards collaboration, but towards irrelevance. A community is not what Facebook gives you. Itâs what you buildâand right now, the only place doing that for surveyors is the one surveyors own themselves.
V. What We Lose: Historical, Technical, and Cultural Knowledge
The greatest tragedy of relying on social media platforms like Facebook to serve as the surveying professionâs meeting ground is not what gets postedâbut what gets lost. Surveying is a profession built on history, precision, and cumulative knowledge, yet the very systems surveyors now depend on are designed to make that knowledge disposable.
Surveying doesnât just involve taking measurements in the presentâit requires understanding the past: the legacy of property lines, historic easements, changes in regulations, and the evolution of equipment and techniques. Every surveyor in the field today stands on the shoulders of those who came before. What happens when that knowledge slips through our fingers because we trusted Facebook to preserve it?
The loss is already happening. Across thousands of social media groups, deep technical threads vanish into the algorithmic void:
- Detailed discussions about boundary law precedents in specific jurisdictions fade as soon as the engagement dries up.
- Historic surveying methodsâlike chain and compass work or early photogrammetry techniquesâget shared once and are never seen again.
- Stories from elder surveyors who witnessed landmark cases or technological revolutions disappear when no one saves the thread.
Unlike a library, a professional journal, or a dedicated archive, social media has no memory. There is no indexing. No citation system. No guarantee that six months or six years from now, the knowledge shared will still be accessibleâlet alone searchable or intact. The entire knowledge structure of the profession becomes ephemeral, like writing on water.
And this loss isnât just technicalâitâs cultural. Surveying has a rich heritage of language, humor, war stories, and shared experience that binds generations together. Every time a seasoned surveyor shares a story of a once-in-a-lifetime project, a harrowing mistake in the field, or a clever workaround learned from a mentor long gone, they are handing down the soul of the profession. But on Facebook, these stories vanish as soon as the next post lands.
The result? Younger surveyors never hear them. They donât learn the history. They donât absorb the cautionary tales. They donât inherit the craftâtheyâre left trying to piece it together from equipment manuals and YouTube videos, wondering why it feels like something is missing. And whatâs missing is the cultural transmission that once made surveying not just a job, but a vocation.
Meanwhile, as the profession hemorrhages its own memory, the companies that scrape these platformsâAI developers, mapping corporations, and tech giantsâpreserve every word, every photo, every mistake. They own what surveyors lose. They train their algorithms on this forgotten knowledge, packaging it into tools that claim to replace the very professionals who produced the data.
This is why the myth that âsharing on Facebook helps the professionâ is so dangerous. It doesnât. It helps the platform. It helps the corporations that feed on the data. But it leaves the profession poorer, forgetful, and vulnerableârepeating mistakes that should have been learned long ago.
There is only one answer: surveying knowledge must be preserved where it belongsâinside the profession itself. That means using platforms like Land Surveyors United, where knowledge is not only shared but archived, indexed, and handed down. Where the history of surveying isnât something that vanishes in a scroll, but a living library the next generation can inherit.
VI. Why Land Surveyors United Is Differentâand Necessary
In a digital world where information is fleeting and platforms are designed to forget, Land Surveyors United (LSU) stands as a deliberate act of resistanceâa space built not to extract value from surveyors but to preserve it for them. Where Facebook and other social media platforms serve the algorithm, LSU serves the profession. And in this moment of technological upheaval, that distinction isnât just importantâitâs existential.
LSU wasnât created to chase clicks or boost engagement metrics. It exists because the surveying profession needsâand deservesâa platform where knowledge is treated like the precious resource it is. Every piece of content posted, every conversation, every guide, every shared document is stored, indexed, and made retrievable for the future. This is not a feed designed to scroll endlessly into oblivion; it is a living archive, a library crafted by surveyors, for surveyors.
The structural difference is everything. On LSU, posts donât vanish. They are categorized by topic, tagged by equipment type, indexed by area of practice. A discussion on RTK drift in coastal zones or a guide to navigating complex right-of-way easements doesnât just generate a blip of engagement and disappearâit becomes part of the professional record, searchable and reusable for the next surveyor facing the same challenge, whether thatâs next week or ten years from now.
Even more critical is ownership. Unlike Facebook, LSU is not a machine for harvesting data. Surveyors own their content, their data, and their professional legacy on the platform. Thereâs no fine print that grants the platform the right to sell, scrape, or exploit the communityâs knowledge. That means the countless hours surveyors spend uploading photos, sharing techniques, and debating legal standards stay within the professionânot in the training dataset of some faceless AI model looking to cut surveyors out of their own industry.
Take, for example, LSUâs LEARN program, which flips the traditional model of knowledge sharing on its head. Instead of giving away expertise for free on a platform that profits from every interaction, LEARN allows surveyors to build courses based on their real-world experienceâand get paid for it. This isnât theory; itâs a working model for professional sustainability in the face of AI automation and data commodification. Surveyors donât just protect their knowledgeâthey monetize it in a way that benefits their peers and the next generation.
This approach directly counters the existential threats detailed in our related articles:
- In âThe Commodification of Surveying Expertiseâ, we explored how Big Tech is harvesting surveyor knowledge for AI models. LSU is the firewall.
- In âThe Vanishing Surveyorâ, we warned about the loss of generational knowledge. LSU is the archive.
- In âThe Future of Surveying Depends on Who Owns the Dataâ, we argued that ownership is the professionâs last line of defense. LSU is that ownership in action.
The truth is this: no algorithm, no AI model, no corporate platform is going to save the surveying profession. Only surveyors can do thatâby choosing where, how, and with whom they share their knowledge. LSU was built for that choice. It offers a permanent home for surveying expertise, a place where the professionâs history is preserved, its future is secured, and its members are respected as the experts they areânot just content creators feeding a machine.
Facebook canâtâand wonâtâdo that. Land Surveyors United already is.
VII. Solutions and A Call to Action
Thereâs no sugarcoating itâsurveyors are at a crossroads. Continuing down the current path means feeding knowledge into systems designed to exploit it, handing over professional expertise to social media companies and AI developers who care nothing for the future of surveying. But it doesnât have to be that way. The good news is, the profession still has a choiceâand the power to reclaim control.
The first step is simple but profound: Stop giving your expertise away for free to platforms that profit from your knowledge while leaving you and your profession weaker. Every time a surveyor uploads a hard-earned solution to Facebook, that knowledge enters a system that sells ads, trains algorithms, and buries expertise. Instead, the community must begin to treat professional knowledge the way it deserves to be treated: as intellectual property, as legacy, as something worth protecting.
Use Land Surveyors United as the Primary Platform for Professional Knowledge
If youâre a surveyor who values the craft, LSU must become your digital home. It is the only platform built for you, by people who understand exactly whatâs at stake. Hereâs what that looks like in practice:
- Post technical discussions, workflow guides, and equipment troubleshooting to LSUânot Facebook.
- Use the platformâs archive features to ensure your knowledge doesnât vanish in a feed but becomes part of a living, searchable record.
- Actively contribute to knowledge bases, equipment guides, and legal resource threads where future surveyors can benefit.
Engage with the LEARN Program to Preserve and Monetize Expertise
The days of giving away decades of experience for free must end. Instead:
- Build courses through LEARN, transforming specialized knowledge into revenue while preserving it for the profession.
- Mentor younger surveyors on LSU, creating a generational bridge that social media platforms cannot replicate.
- View knowledge as an assetâone that should benefit the profession, not corporations training AI to replace it.
Push Surveying Associations Toward Data Ownership Advocacy
The professionâs leadership must wake up to the threat of data commodification. Every state board, every national association, every professional society needs to:
- Advocate for data sovereignty in surveyingâpolicies that protect surveyor-generated data from exploitation.
- Educate members on the dangers of freely uploading to platforms like Facebook.
- Develop best practices for digital knowledge preservation, steering the profession away from disposable content culture.
Organize to Protect Professional Knowledge
Surveyors are no strangers to professional advocacy when it comes to licensure or regulatory battles. The same urgency must now be applied to knowledge preservation:
- Establish a surveying knowledge preservation fund or initiative to ensure the professionâs history and expertise are protected.
- Create working groups focused on protecting historical records, case studies, and technical guides from disappearing into digital dustbins.
- Lobby for ethical AI development standards, ensuring that companies cannot scrape surveying content without compensation or consent.
Educate Clients and the Public
Part of the reason this knowledge drain continues unchecked is that clients, policymakers, and even some surveyors donât see the threat. That changes now:
- Teach clients why professional expertise matters more than machine-learning models or cheap AI mapping tools.
- Publish articles, give talks, and share resources on the value of preserving surveying knowledge for public safety and infrastructure integrity.
- Make it clear: Surveying is not content. It is a profession, a craft, a body of knowledge earned in the field and refined over generations.
If the profession does nothing, the outcome is inevitable. Surveyors will become content creators for platforms that pay them nothing, AI models will cannibalize their knowledge, and Big Tech will control the very tools and data surveyors need to survive.
But thereâs still time to change course. Thereâs still time to build our own spaces, protect our own knowledge, and reclaim our professionâs future. LSU exists because the profession needs a homeâa place where expertise is preserved, respected, and passed down, not lost in the scroll.
The call is simple: Stop building their platform. Start building our own.
VIII. Conclusion: If Surveyors Donât Build Their Archive, Someone Else Willâand They Wonât Give It Back
Surveying is one of the oldest and most honorable professionsâa craft rooted in precision, memory, and truth. But no craft, no matter how proud, can survive if its knowledge is treated as disposable. That is exactly whatâs happening today as the profession continues to trust its history, expertise, and future to platforms designed to bury it.
Facebook will not save the profession. Neither will LinkedIn, nor Instagram, nor any platform whose business model is built on harvesting data, maximizing engagement, and selling your knowledge to the highest bidder. These companies are not archives. They are extraction enginesâmining surveying expertise to feed AI models, enrich tech companies, and leave the profession hollowed out and forgotten.
And once that knowledge is goneâonce itâs scraped, buried, or monetized by someone elseâsurveyors wonât get it back. There is no "undo" button when the cultural, technical, and legal expertise of a profession is lost to algorithms. Thereâs only regret.
This is the real choice surveyors face nowânot between Facebook and LSU, not between engagement and archivingâbut between owning their future or surrendering it. If surveyors do not build their own archives, protect their own data, and take control of their digital footprint, someone else will. And those "someone elses"âBig Tech, AI companies, data brokersâwill not return the favor. They will not protect the profession. They will profit from its collapse.
Land Surveyors United is proof that another path existsâa space where knowledge is preserved, owned by the community, and passed down. A place where the work of a lifetime doesnât vanish with the next algorithm change, but becomes part of a permanent record that educates, informs, and strengthens the profession. LSU isnât about clicks or likesâitâs about survival, legacy, and building something surveyors can hand off to the next generation with pride.
The time to act is now. Because if we wait, the knowledge that defines this profession will belong to someone elseâand the next generation of surveyors will pay the price. Theyâll pay for access to data we created. Theyâll work for the companies that mined our knowledge. Theyâll inherit a hollowed-out profession, stripped of its power, its history, and its voice.
It does not have to be that way. But the profession must choose.
Stop building their platform. Start building our own.
Preserve the knowledge. Protect the profession. Secure the future.
Land Surveyors United isnât just a website. Itâs the home surveying needsâbefore itâs too late.
Thoughts