The fatality of Facebook?

4

October

2018

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Facebook. The most downloaded app, reaching more than two billion people.

Facebook. Facilitating the share of 300 million shared photos daily.

Facebook. The social media companies love to utilize.

Facebook. Inventor of “surveillance capitalism”.

 

While our (students of this class) affinity with Facebook in the past decade has been second to none in terms of social media, western millennials’ connection to the tech-giant has taken multiple hits. Recent turmoil within the organization is yet another reason that our engagement with the organization is about to lose its ‘cru’.

 

Looking at the broad picture it can be a tough case arguing for turning the alarm light on. Charts analyzing revenue, profits, and number of daily active users (DAU) has the same curvature as a Tour de France stage ending at Col du Tourmalet (Statista, 2018) – a deadly ascending slope. However, the immense introduction of advertisers and their strong embeddedness within the social media was a turning point for many millennials (Sweney, 2018). Moreover, Cambridge Analytica incident have, in addition to a plummeting stock price, caused multiple corporations to erode their connection to the social media (The Straits Times, 2018).

Adding to the progressive flames, field studies indicate that the first big chunk of three million under 25’s in the US and UK alone will leave the site (Ibid.). These number were conducted prior to September’s security breach where 50 million users had their information stolen!

 

The turbulence concerning the business model and the vulgar use of advertisers and the questionable ethics of the management has led to concerns. Both for users, but likewise from the advertisers who pay for the ongoing life of the media. Unilever, the world’s second advertiser (Kollewe, 2018), threatens to pull advertising from Facebook.

 

This leaves the question: Are Facebook going to survive this turbulent time – and if so, how will these incidents impact the organization’s business model?

 

 

 

Source:

Kollewe, J. (2018) The Guardian, Business, Economics Banking Money Markets Project Syndicate B2B, website: https://www.theguardian.com/media/2018/feb/12/marmite-unilever-ads-facebook-google

Statista (2018) Overview, Webiste: https://www.statista.com/topics/751/facebook/

Sweney, M. (2018) The Guardian, ‘Parents killed it’: why Facebook is losing its teenage users, website: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/feb/16/parents-killed-it-facebook-losing-teenage-users

The Straits Times (2018) Cambridge Analytica: Impact and backlash, Website: https://www.straitstimes.com/world/cambridge-analytica-impact-and-backlash

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GENERATION GOOGLE

15

September

2018

5/5 (1)

Google. What would we do without it?

Google: imperative in the ordinary person’s daily life to settle arguments.
Google translate: life-saving for high school students who are bothered learning German.
Google maps: vital for the modern tourist and most uber drivers.
Youtube: catapulting self-obsessed teenagers into internet fame.

Google. The internet jellyfish that grew into a hydra has just celebrated its 20th birthday. While
tech-reporters foretell a rough path ahead of the mastodon (Nieva, 2018), it went through its
adolescence rather eminent. Since you commenced reading this blogpost Google has expedited around a million queries – I kid you not (SpinFold, 2018). The company out of Menlo Park, CA, has reached a magnitude where its strategic behavior is constantly scrutinized. The EU’s commissioner for competition, Margrethe Vestager, has at multiple occasions fined Google for its anti-competitive behavior (Salinas, 2018). However, this intensified attention from competition commissioners may not be Google’s biggest challenge going into its twenties. In the majority of its teenage years Google had strong ties with Washington. This has changed though, and the agenda of the federal government does not indicate invitations to dinner parties any time soon. The President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, has recently aired his frustrations with Google’s influential power. On Twitter, the America President shared a video with allegations of Google’s taking political standpoints. According to the somewhat controversial president Google haS favored his political opponents in search results. As a result, Google have been invited to Capitol Hill for a hearing. However, reports have it, that Google has chosen not to accept this invitation (Nieva, 2018). What kind of consequences this non-cooperative behavior will lead to is currently only known to fortune tellers. For the mortal remainder of the population this will stay an enigma for the future to untie.

Hopefully, we will maintain the opportunity to google away!

Bibliography:
Nieva, R. (2018) Cnet, News, 20 years on, Goolge faces its biggest challenges, Website: https://www.cnet.com/news/20-years-on-google-faces-its-biggest-challenges/, Last visited September 14, 2018 – 19.50.

Salinas, S. (2018) CNBC, Tech, EU commissioner on $5 billion antitrust fine: Google has to ‘stop this behavior’, Website: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/18/eu-commissioner-margrethe-vestager-interview-google-antitrust-fine.html, last visited September 15, 2018 – 11.04

SpinFold (2018) Home, Amazing Facts, 50 Amazing and interesting facts about Google, Website: http://www.spinfold.com/50-amazing-and-interesting-facts-about-google/, last visited September 15, 2018 09.32

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