Connect with us

Bloomberg Technology

Facebook Faces Big Headwinds

Elevation Partners Founder and early Facebook investor Roger McNamee tells Emily Chang that Facebook has saturated the market for its existing products in North America and Western Europe, that the big tech sector is out of touch with the change of public sentiment, and that investors need to recognize that Facebook being a good stock…

Published

on

Elevation Partners Founder and early Facebook investor Roger McNamee tells Emily Chang that Facebook has saturated the market for its existing products in North America and Western Europe, that the big tech sector is out of touch with the change of public sentiment, and that investors need to recognize that Facebook being a good stock for now does not mean it is the right thing to invest in for society’s sake.
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Emily Chang here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Emily Chang here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Emily Chang here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Emily Chang here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:

I’m curious what you find most alarming about these documents
that have been obtained by Bloomberg and also the revelation of

Frances Halligan over the last couple of months. What do you
what troubles you the most. So to me Frances Halligan is

incredibly courageous for bringing these documents out. The
impact of them is that they’ve shifted the conversation about

Facebook from a focus on free speech issues to where it really
belongs which is on a business model that essentially puts 3

billion people onto a network with no boundaries and then
unleashes a business model that promotes inflammatory emotion.

So hate speech disinformation and conspiracy theories are given
an economic advantage on Facebook. And the result is that ideas

from the fringe things like antivirus and white supremacy have
been mainstreamed. And that’s undermined democracy it’s

undermined public health it’s undermined privacy. And this a
huge problem. And if you’re an investor this Facebook is been a

great stock for you. But on a looking forward basis you have to
ask the question if the U.S. loses its ability to be a democracy

and if each one of us loses the ability to make our own choices
because they’re being made by Internet platforms is that a good

trade. Right. I think last throes usually comes up here. And if
you’re an investor in Facebook today it was a great day for

Facebook and Facebook up close. Facebook up three and a half
percent after the close on the back of these results that are

mixed. And on the same day that these you know thousands of
pages of documents have been pored through by multiple different

news organizations. If that’s not going to send Facebook stock
down what is. Well to be clear I don’t think the stock’s a good

measure of what’s going on here. I think the stock market
operates in a completely different time scale. And so I think

investors are making the correct judgment which is the numbers
were terrific least relative to what you would’ve expected.

Looking at SNAP the other day the impact of Apple changing
privacy had a dramatic effect on snap it at Facebook. They have

a lot of dials to turn. They can lower the quality of the ads
that they show. They can allow people of new users onto the site

that if you will are not authentic. There are lots of dials that
are available to them to make the numbers look good. But that’s

very short term. And I think investors have a super short time
horizon here. Where’s the stuff going on with government’s going

to take time to process. You have legal issues relative to the
FCC with disclosure relative to insider trading. There’s a big

case in Delaware six large pension plans that are accusing
Facebook of insider trading around Cambridge Analytics. These

things are felonies. There are Department of Justice cases
relative to price fixing in digital advertising related to.

There should be an investigation of the whistleblower’s
information about human trafficking or about the January 6

insurrection where again Facebook has been implicated time and
again in both the radicalization of people into Q and on and

into stop the steal and then allowing them to organize. The
protests and then the insurrection itself on Facebook and its

obvious management knew about all of this stuff and they’ve
dealt with without proper ties profit does does timespan on

Facebook among teens dropping 16 percent. Does that alarm you.
Is that something that Facebook should have been more

transparent about. Is that something that investors had known
coming directly from the company itself. You know would the

stock be continuing to rise. Would revenue be continuing to grow
with 30 billion dollars quarter after quarter.

So I think the issues that Facebook really faces is that in
North America and Western Europe its most profitable markets it

is reach saturation of the population. And there’s no question
that tick tock is draining people away from Instagram. And I

look at this and the bad press that Instagram is getting right
now should accelerate that departure. And I don’t think there’s

anything Facebook can do about it that’s legitimate. They’d love
to change the conversation to the metaverse but that technology

is not good enough to replace
the hold that is being left in their business. Facebook is a

mature company. It’s not going to grow as rapidly. The numbers
are higher in the short run. That’s coming out of the future.

And investor just need to be more careful. They should really
they should take an opportunity. Do you think the metaverse

actually is for Facebook Roger. I mean Mark Zuckerberg wants to
bet the future on this. A potential name change on this. I mean

is that going to pick up this big name change has nothing to do
with. The name change is about distracting us from the fact that

the company is going to face a series of legal problems and Zuck
personally is going to face some legal problems here. And you

know this is a real test for our system right. We’ve allowed
this company and Google and others to run without any

supervision. They’ve caused tremendous harm. They’ve made
investors a fortune. And investors are incredibly thankful. But

the rest of the country is pretty unhappy about it. And the
question is are we going to do something to try to restore some

balance. Or are we not going to do so. And the metaverse is
literally a dream. And if you look at the demos they’re

horrible. And to my mind
Facebook is going to spend so much time dealing with the

problems that are being exposed now both in court and in
Congress that the metaverse. But if they ever get it to work

it’s going to come very late. And you’re not going to want to
wait from here to there on the hope of the metaverse. The name

change is literally a distraction. It’s literally something that
they’re just trying to do two things to get us to look

elsewhere. And they want to somehow find a way to insulate Mark
Zuckerberg from legal liability for the problems that have

already been created. And you know.
At this point Roger what kind of regulation do you think is

realistic and right. Reid Hoffman an investor in Facebook in the
early days just like yourselves told me that he’s disappointed

in Facebook as well but he thinks that breaking up Facebook is
the wrong approach because that’ll make it even harder to set

you centralize all of these systems and the technology that’s
needed to combat hate on a global scale. What do you think. I

think we have three areas we need to regulate and they need to
cover not just Facebook but all of technology. We need to have

safety regulations something that functions like the FDA that
sits there and says wait a minute. Facial recognition deep fakes

have no valid commercial use. They shouldn’t be allowed in the
market until they prove a valid use. The same would be true of

the pharmaceutical companies like Google and YouTube and
Instagram. And Facebook would have to make changes in their

business practices to make them safe for people. And that would
be something that this FDA like thing would look at every year.

The second area is privacy. This whole notion that companies are
allowed to use data to manipulate the choices and behavior of

people. That is really not an American idea. I mean it’s
basically taking over from right to self-determination. So it’s

like child labor. It’s the sort of thing that we should ban
outright. And then thirdly on antitrust I think the root thing

is to allow for competition. To me if you’re going to break them
up that comes downstream. But first you have to open up markets

and prevent companies from monopolizing the way everything takes
place in the economy. You saw it happen when Facebook went down.

The millions of small businesses depend on Facebook were shut
down by that and that that’s what monopolies do. And that’s not

good.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
17 Comments

17 Comments

  1. Lost my Password

    October 27, 2021 at 4:54 pm

    I disagree with is calling it a “business model”. To me it is nothing but a model of abuse. How to make billions on others peoples belongings

  2. dovasd

    October 27, 2021 at 5:09 pm

    Excellent perspective! A moderate approach to what needs to be done to make FB better!

  3. sadfasde3

    October 27, 2021 at 7:08 pm

    If you have different opinions than mine you shouldn’t be able to talk! How moral.

  4. Gordon Mei

    October 27, 2021 at 8:09 pm

    Dude seriously hate Facebook.

  5. BloodySabbath84

    October 27, 2021 at 10:06 pm

    This woman’s pitch is hysterical

  6. Mike

    October 27, 2021 at 10:16 pm

    Load the boat on FB

  7. Bahls Deepe

    October 27, 2021 at 11:38 pm

    Facebook is for retards💯

  8. kayrow

    October 28, 2021 at 5:36 am

    This hysteria is pathetic. BTFD

  9. bittence

    October 28, 2021 at 6:45 am

    Why the recent slew of negative FB press? am i missing something because everyone already knew these platforms optimize along metrics that aren’t the best for users- they’re an advertising business model, the sudden coverage and outrage seems contrived.

  10. Sean Kavanagh

    October 28, 2021 at 7:34 am

    Breaking news: Old man doesn’t understand technology.

    • TV Mohini

      October 28, 2021 at 1:45 pm

      Most likely you don’t

  11. Brian Estell

    October 28, 2021 at 11:58 am

    Let the truth set you free..Facebook brain washing us thanks for saving us joe now lock Zuckerberg up

  12. Sean Bearer

    October 28, 2021 at 12:56 pm

    Kill facebook kill google get these trash companies out they’re worse than a third world warlord

  13. win loader

    October 28, 2021 at 1:29 pm

    Facebook is worth learning from the utopia ecosystem.

  14. tay Ya

    October 28, 2021 at 1:59 pm

    Sold my stocks and bought SOLANA

  15. Ship CommanderLoL

    October 28, 2021 at 5:55 pm

    silly old man what the hell he knows?!

  16. TESLA

    October 28, 2021 at 6:50 pm

    Fakebook

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Bloomberg Technology

Nvidia’s Magic Fades | Bloomberg Technology

Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde discusses the latest sentiment around Nvidia as investors cool on the AI darling despite posting an earnings beat. And, the new Trump administration is said to be mulling a first-ever crypto policy role. Plus, Palo Alto Networks sees easier “fixes” ahead in cybersecurity as the world moves from hardware to software. ——–…

Published

on

Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde discusses the latest sentiment around Nvidia as investors cool on the AI darling despite posting an earnings beat. And, the new Trump administration is said to be mulling a first-ever crypto policy role. Plus, Palo Alto Networks sees easier “fixes” ahead in cybersecurity as the world moves from hardware to software.
——–
“Bloomberg Technology” is our daily news program focused exclusively on technology, innovation and the future of business hosted by Ed Ludlow from San Francisco and Caroline Hyde in New York.

Like this video? Subscribe and turn on the notifications for Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Follow Ed Ludlow on Twitter here:
Follow Caroline Hyde on Twitter here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:

Continue Reading

Bloomberg Technology

Palo Alto CEO Says Regulations May Get Easier Under Trump

Nikesh Arora, CEO of Palo Alto Networks, says M&A could potentially move quicker under the new Trump administration as they take on a more deregulatory tone. He joins Caroline Hyde to discuss on “Bloomberg Technology.” ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:   Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with…

Published

on

Nikesh Arora, CEO of Palo Alto Networks, says M&A could potentially move quicker under the new Trump administration as they take on a more deregulatory tone. He joins Caroline Hyde to discuss on “Bloomberg Technology.”
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

 
Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here:

 
Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
X:
Facebook:
Instagram:
 
Follow Ed Ludlow on X here:
Follow Caroline Hyde on X here:
 
Listen to the daily Bloomberg Technology podcast here:

 
More from Bloomberg Business
Connect with us on…
X:
Facebook:
Instagram:
LinkedIn:
TikTok:

Continue Reading

Bloomberg Technology

JPM Rolls Out AI Assistant for Workers

JPMorgan Chase Chief Data and Analytics Officer Teresa Heitsenrether talks about how the company is using an artificial intelligence assistant called LLM Suite. She speaks to Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde at the Evident AI Symposium in New York. ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:   Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg…

Published

on

JPMorgan Chase Chief Data and Analytics Officer Teresa Heitsenrether talks about how the company is using an artificial intelligence assistant called LLM Suite. She speaks to Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde at the Evident AI Symposium in New York.
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

 
Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here:

 
Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
X:
Facebook:
Instagram:
 
Follow Ed Ludlow on X here:
Follow Caroline Hyde on X here:
 
Listen to the daily Bloomberg Technology podcast here:

 
More from Bloomberg Business
Connect with us on…
X:
Facebook:
Instagram:
LinkedIn:
TikTok:

Continue Reading

Trending