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Zuckerberg Goes Off-Script, Blasts Apple and Google in Testimony (bloomberg.com) 118

During today's testimony before a Congressional antitrust panel, Mark Zuckerberg went off-script a little bit pointing out how Facebook lags behind a number of competitors, including Alphabet, Amazon.com and Apple. From a report: Zuckerberg isn't hesitating to use some sharp elbows, pointing out that Amazon is the fastest-growing advertising platform and Google is the biggest. "In many areas, we are behind our competitors," Zuckerberg said. "The most popular messaging service in the U.S. is iMessage. The fastest growing app is TikTok. The most popular app for video is YouTube. The fastest growing ads platform is Amazon. The largest ads platform is Google. And for every dollar spent on advertising in the U.S., less than ten cents is spent with us."
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Zuckerberg Goes Off-Script, Blasts Apple and Google in Testimony

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  • Do we still regulate advertising?

    Coulda fooled me...

    • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:42PM (#60345169)

      Do we still regulate advertising?

      Coulda fooled me...

      "Traditional media" is still regulated (radio/TV/magazines, etc.) but, you know, Facebook and the like aren't "media" or "publishers", so they don't need regulation apparently (says the Zuck).

    • by Cylix ( 55374 )

      Regulations for traditional media are extremely limited. Cigarettes, cartoons/children’s programming and alcohol have some restrictions.

      That is rather where it ends.

      There are certainly some nuances for paid advertisements, but that is why they advertise paid ad.

      If anything the internet has stricter regulations on content.

      So what do you feel is being violated?

      • Not quite (Score:5, Informative)

        by ttfkam ( 37064 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @06:19PM (#60345303) Homepage Journal

        You can't advertise a place to rent that excludes Jews or Black folks or LGBTQ+. Newspapers can't. TV stations can't. If you're Facebook you can. And they have.

        It could have just been an oversight, right? Just a UI glitch? Nope. They were in no hurry to fix the "bug".

        https://www.propublica.org/art... [propublica.org]

        • Re:Not quite (Score:5, Insightful)

          by goose-incarnated ( 1145029 ) on Thursday July 30, 2020 @02:47AM (#60346323) Journal

          You can't advertise a place to rent that excludes Jews or Black folks or LGBTQ+. Newspapers can't. TV stations can't. If you're Facebook you can. And they have.

          It could have just been an oversight, right? Just a UI glitch? Nope. They were in no hurry to fix the "bug".

          https://www.propublica.org/art... [propublica.org]

          No one placed an advertisement that excluded anyone. That link of your does not support what you said. I don't know why you got modded up.

          What you said happened: The advertisers placed an ad that said "no Jews/Blacks/etc".

          What actually happened: The advertisers specified the demographics of the target, which excluded many other demographics

          Explain to me how that differs from traditional advertising? Are advertisers excluding women when they place ads in Men's Health? Are they excluding Jews when they place ads in Pork Monthly? When they advertise places to rent in the local city paper which is distributed only to the locals (who are almost all white), is that racist?

          Now maybe the advertisers are racist, but when you specifically go out of your way and take the extra effort to spin what happened into some warped and dishonest version so that you get to virtue signal for internet points, then you are morally worse than those advertisers targeting a certain wealthy demographic.

          One day the mob will come for you too.

          • > Are advertisers excluding women when they place ads in Men's Health?

            If an advertiser were to go to Hearst and say they want to advertise real estate for rent but only run the ads in Men's Health, Hearst very well may be liable under the same theory. Except of course Hearst knows what the hell they are doing and wouldn't take the ad buy!

            Facebook has a market cap of $665B. They can afford to hire an attorney or two to make sure they comply with the fair housing act.

            The OP got it right with "They were in no hurry to fix the bug." They were informed multiple times an

            • > Are advertisers excluding women when they place ads in Men's Health?

              If an advertiser were to go to Hearst and say they want to advertise real estate for rent but only run the ads in Men's Health, Hearst very well may be liable under the same theory.

              You're talking horseshit. There is no requirement in law that advertisements for rentals cannot appear in specialist reading matter. If you think there is, post your source.

              • No there is not a law that they can't appear in specialist magazines. And I didn't say there was. There is a law against housing discrimination and Facebook was charged with "enabling advertisers to discriminate" (link to criminal complaint: https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfil... [hud.gov]). There is no reason that Hearst couldn't be charged under the same theory. But, again, because Hearst (even though they are a much smaller company) is versed in housing discrimination rules and probably wouldn't be a willing partic
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Well they are the zealots of mass consumption, when it comes to burning the planet to the ground, they are the religious fundamentalists, doing more to push mindless consumption than any other corporations on the planet and all whilst hiding behind greener than green PR=B$. So we have climate change, diminishing resources, excessive pollution and the biggest pushers of mass consumption, doing it for profit, without the single slightest consideration of the harm they are causing, all pretend how great they a

    • they can, and do, get in trouble for posting videos when they have been paid to promote something and they don't reveal that fact in the video.

      same goes for instagrammers.

      I think its the FCC that does it.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:28PM (#60345111)
    Almost ten cents of every dollar is spend on Facebook in the US. Out of all local newspapers and TV stations and radio stations, all web advertising, all social platforms, connected TV. All the blogs, all the news sites out there. The entire fucking US of A and this gormless prick gets almost 10 percent AND HE THINKS IT'S TOO SMALL? His cock is too small but his head is too big.
    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      The other thing to gleam for that statement is that (if he is right and Facebook is behind Amazon and Google in ad revenue) approx 45% (or more) of all advertising is spent on only three platforms. I guess he does state that Amazon is the fastest growing ad platform so maybe only Google is above Facebook but that would only make his statement all the more ridiculous.

      • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
        How are you getting that?

        I get Facebook is less than 10%, Google is more than 10% and Amazon could be anything, it's just growing the fastest.
        • by PackMan97 ( 244419 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:54PM (#60345223)
          Not true. I just launched an ad Network this morning and we've sold one ad. The day before we had sold zero. Our growth is so spectacular, you can't even compute it!
        • by aitikin ( 909209 )

          I'm guessing GP is assuming that Amazon is more than FB and that Google is still more than both, so it's not a far fetched assumption to go 9.94% (because Zuck would use the rounding to his favor) to FB, 10-15% to Amazon, 15%+ to Google.

          I'm operating under the assumption that Zuck didn't mean all ad revenue, merely internet ad revenue (still ridiculous).

          • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
            So, I looked things up, and it is ALL ad revenue.

            They do did 35-40 billion US ad sales total last year.

            The online market was 120b or so.

            The total market I see numbers between 260 and 390.

            The chart that had online at 120b had total at 260b, and was predicting it to be closer to half of all advertising this year. I had NO IDEA online advertising was such a huge percent.
            • by aitikin ( 909209 )
              I didn't realize that either. I know my company pays out the nose for Google ads (not my dept, so I have no clue what it actually comes to, but the head of marketing often says every clicked ad (emphasis as it's specifically the ad, not the SEO results) on Google search results costs us a dollar) and I'm sure our Facebook ads are not cheap either. So I guess I shouldn't be surprised, but...still...
              • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
                Where I work we haven't had much luck with Google ads ($1 per click is pretty steep and as a local print shop we'll rarely be able to compete for the internet shopper with the likes of Vista Print). We've actually had pretty good luck with Facebook though, we dropped $100 or so when COVID-19 was becoming obvious to be real and excluding one lucky job that paid for the whole thing we still probably would have broken even (net not gross). It's not much but definitely had an immediate small impact and let peop
                • by aitikin ( 909209 )
                  I work at a company that had one of the first websites ever registered as well as one of the first webstores. We have a higher margin industry, so it makes quite a bit more sense. Sad part is that Amazon's starting to dip into our industry and they're driving the cost up for the Google ads, so when the head of marketing has the quarterly meeting in a couple weeks, I'll likely hear it's now something like $1.50/click.
        • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

          Ok, I'll admit that I was a bit loose with the numbers but let's assume that Facebook is slightly less than 10%. We can also assume that Google is greater than 10% and I also assumed that Amazon was higher than Facebook but lower than Google. Using that assumption I assumed that Facebook was close enough to 10% to use 10%. If Amazon is higher than that and Google is higher still I just pulled a number higher than 30% but less than 50%. I also assume that Google probably has significantly higher ad revenues

    • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
      I suspect he meant online advertising and left it out.

      A quick Google says the US ad market is roughly 300 billion, and Facebook's revenue on it in the US is 9 billion.
      • by Entrope ( 68843 )

        I am not sure where you got that $9B number -- in January of this year, Facebook reported [fb.com] $20.7B of advertising revenue in just the fourth quarter of 2019, and $69.7B for the entire year. Zuckerberg probably meant exactly what he said.

        • by AvitarX ( 172628 )
          It was apparently quarterly revenue (US only), which actually takes it pretty close (a little over) to the 10% of total of 300b I used, but I don't know where that number came from, the closest I'm finding now is $260 or so, though there's a pay-walled article that claims 390.

          So you're correct, it's right around 10% and probably a little over.

          https://www.statista.com/statistics/223280/facebooks-quarterly-revenue-in-the-us-and-canada-by-segment/#:~:text=Facebook%3A%20quarterly%20revenue%20in%20the,Canada%202
    • by tsa ( 15680 )

      Indeed. I wish I had problems like that. The guy gets rich sleeping and he’s still complaining, the zucker.

    • That seems an unlikely number.

      Americans spend about $10.7 trillion per year.

      https://www.mentalfloss.com/ar... [mentalfloss.com]

      Facebook's annual revenue is just under $71bn.

      Even if ALL of facebook's revenue was from Americans (we know it isn't), that's just over a half of 1% of US consumer spending.

      Edit: https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

      It seems that FB makes about half its ad revenue from OUSA sources, so we're talking about Americans spend about 0.25% of their money on FB. Still a huge number, but nowhere near 10%.

  • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:29PM (#60345117) Journal

    "And they're big dumb poo-poo heads too."

    Actualy, what better way to prove that they're all in a properly competitive market, than to complain that your competitors are competing and to describe the areas in which they're ahead?

    • It's a ruse (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Sebby ( 238625 )

      Actualy, what better way to prove that they're all in a properly competitive market, than to complain that your competitors are competing and to describe the areas in which they're ahead?

      They're all colluding with each other to give the messaging that they don't need regulation/investigation because "look, we're all healthily competing with each other!".

      • Re:It's a ruse (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @06:44PM (#60345383)

        The problem isn't that they're competing with each other, the problem is that nobody can compete with them. The next worst thing after a monopoly is a cartel.

        • by guruevi ( 827432 )

          Cartel (oligopolies) do not compete. That is kind of the definition and modus operandi of a cartel.

        • by vlad30 ( 44644 )
          They are not cartels cartels divide up markets and technically they are competing however it is near impossible to compete unless you have very deep pockets. They are where newspapers were 30 years ago. Any small papers were being bought up by the larger corporations who could afford better writers better equipment and economies of scale. They at least added value with the better writing now the advertising is attached to "influencer's" which are actually advertisements and free crap spouted by the users th
          • The named corps really aren't competing. They each have different segments of the market, and people use multiple services.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          They aren't really competing with each other. Google tried to make a social network and it failed. Facebook doesn't have an online marketplace or giant warehouses like Amazon does.

          Does anyone buy that bullshit about YouTube being the biggest video site, as if Facebook is even trying to compete with them? Facebook doesn't have a dedicated video site and video quality is a joke, and you can't monetize Facebook videos either.

          Oh sure, they all sell ads, but in vastly different areas.

  • Translation (Score:4, Interesting)

    by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh&gmail,com> on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:41PM (#60345165) Journal

    So Facebook is the second fastest growing, and second largest ad platform in the US, and the second most popular video service, and the second most popular messaging service, and it has almost 10% market share of *advertising in general* in the US, oh and one company is #1 in 2 out of those 3 industries that Facebook is #2 in. No problem here!

    It's a shame it took so long to seriously consider breaking up the Silicon Valley megacorps, and it's an even bigger shame that it's being considered for Trumpian dumbshit reasons.

  • Holy shit, to think that Zuckerberg complains that his company isn't a dangerous monopoly when they own 10% of the advertising market for a country with 370million people.

    • Holy shit, to think that Zuckerberg complains that his company isn't a dangerous monopoly when they own 10% of the advertising market for a country with 370million people.

      It's a bit more than the advertising market for 326 million people. According to Business Insider in 2018 they had 20% of the global advertising market so unless something has changed in a major way for their advertising business, Zuckerberg was lying. On top of that Facebook is basically a monopoly in their particular segment of the social media market. Given their ubiquity on the social media scene, the fact that vast numbers of people get all their news from Facebook posts, and if they wanted to, Faceboo

      • by Daetrin ( 576516 )
        I haven't looked at the numbers, but it's entirely possible for something to be 20% or more of a large set but (sightly) less than 10% of a subset of that set. In fact unless the sample is entirely homogeneous it's a mathematical necessity that some subsets will have a higher percentage while other subsets will have a lower percentage.

        Of course if that's the case that's almost certainly why he specified that they have less than 10% of the advertising market in the US rather than just saying they have less
    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @07:29PM (#60345495)
      They're always focused on places where they're behind, and how they can strengthen their business in those areas to compete better and hopefully gain the lead. That's what makes them successful - because they're always focused on ways to improve their business.

      People who think "Oh yeah, no need to change anything - we're doing good enough," get passed up and become not-so successful people. That's why I consigned myself to never growing beyond running a small business. I can't deal with the stress, worry, and paranoia needed to push myself to really become successful. I have a friend who owns a $20 million company, and the reason he can cope with it is because he enjoys that stress. He likes getting only 4 hours of sleep, spending every waking moment reading up on what the industry and his competitors are doing, so he can try to outmaneuver them. He considers it fun. His wife was telling me when they went on vacation, she was constantly having to pull their kids' phones and tablets out of his hands because he kept trying to use them to do work. To him, work was more fun than vacation.

      There was a telling interview with Shawn Fanning (creator of Napster - the first distributed music file sharing program). He said when he first got the idea for distributed file sharing, he coded for days straight with minimal sleep because he was paranoid that someone else with the same idea would release a program before he could. That's the kind of personality you need to really drive yourself to succeed. Lots of people probably had the idea for something like Facebook, but Zuckerberg had the personality to make it happen.

      Heck, my $20 million friend told me the story of how he started his company, and I realized that *I* had had the same idea a couple years before him. He sells advertising space on generic domains like patiofurniture.com (just an example, dunno if that's really his). Back around 1995, I was in grad school and my labmates and I wanted to go see a movie. Back then, you needed to check a newspaper or call the movie theater to get the movie playtimes. But there was this new thing called the World Wide Web, and I wondered if maybe the theater had listed their playtimes on a website. I searched for a bit but didn't find anything. Then I had the fleeting thought - I could register movies.com and set up a website listing movie playtimes, and sell space on the site to movie theaters, thus rendering playtimes in newspapers and recorded phone messages obsolete. That thought danced around in my head for about 10 seconds. But then I decided I was an engineering grad student, I really needed to work on my thesis, something like this really should be done by someone in the movie industry, and I really needed to get going because my friends were waiting for me so we could head to the theater. And I never thought about it again.

      In contrast, when my friend got the same idea, he was a student working on a medical degree. Despite his already-full schedule, he set aside time so he could learn how the Internet, domains, websites, and hosting services worked, and taught himself how to code his own websites. He drove himself to do everything he could to bring this idea to fruition. I OTOH came up with every excuse I could think of to give up on the idea. That's what separates successful people from not-successful people - the drive to improve and make things happen.
    • No one said he was a monopoly on advertising - he's playing some clever misdirection here. I doubt it was "off script" at all.

      Just because he's "only" 10% of all US advertising doesn't mean he's not running a monopoly. If you want a social web site, sadly, Facebook is about the only real game in town. If you want to advertise to facebook users, then the only way to do that is with Facebook. Thus, his monopoly in one area (social media) is being used to help him out in another area (advertising). That didn't

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @05:55PM (#60345227) Journal
    "We were the ones who made not having privacy normal. We were the ones who made people drop their guard. We were the ones that made people not realize how much their data is worth. It was like America in Saudi Arabia in the 50s, we gave them a buck for a barrel and they were kissing our, ahem, feet for that kindness. We are the ones who sneaked up from behind and hit them with the head.

    But, but, just as we were rifling through their pockets Google stole the gold watch, Amazon took the gold chain and the blings, Apple stole the diamond rings, and we who just got a few nickels and dimes. It aint fair ..."

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @06:03PM (#60345255) Homepage Journal

    that Zuckerberg's benchmark for advertising insignificance is 10% of the entire online advertising market.

  • Does anyone have an actual argument founded in legal code from a relevant example? I get you feel some things should be wrong, but that is not how legal code actual works.

    I suppose this is why the crazies are burning everything down.

  • ... that idiots love to use Facebook?
  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @06:28PM (#60345329) Journal
    Not at all surprising from Zuckerberg. If you open up the Wikipedia page for 'weasel' they should have his picture.
    • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
      Question about your sig: how will we know when there are no more racist police?
      • Get rid of racist police and there won't need to be violent protests. No need to protest = systemic racism has been eliminated in law enforcement.
        Now, do you have any more bait questions you want to ask or are we done here?
        • Get rid of racist police and there won't need to be violent protests. No need to protest = systemic racism has been eliminated in law enforcement.

          Now, do you have any more bait questions you want to ask or are we done here?

          I think I agree with you, but that has got to be the most irrational answer I've seen on here in a while (ignoring ACs).

          • You're aware there are only so many characters you can use in a sigline, right?
            Non-white people in this country (among others) have been putting up with systemic racism for hundreds of years.
            Now they've had quite enough so we've got protests.
            Ignoring for the moment that there are some violent assholes who are using protests as an excuse to be violent assholes, and also ignoring for the moment that there is some False Flag bullshit going on, non-protestors making violence to discredit the protests in gene
            • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
              Still wondering how we will, objectively, know that there are no racist police (0?). When will you know it’s time to stop the protests? It seems important to me to have a way of measuring whether or not the goal has been reached.
              • It seems important to me to have a way of measuring whether or not the goal has been reached.

                Is it important to know that before taking action? If your boat is sinking, is it important that you can measure how dry it is before you start bailing water?

                • by MikeMo ( 521697 )
                  Of course we take action soonest. Your analogy is weak, as we obviously know when to stop bailing. Everyone talks about these great goals of “no systemic racism” and “no white privilege” but those seem to be unmeasurable things. If we have something objectively measurable, we’ll also have things we can point at and say “here’s what to do about this thing”, or “hey, that is getting better, let’s work on this aspect”. Right now, they’
            • Totally aware of that. But you were asked how we'll know when there are no more racist police. It's a good question.

              I agree with everything you just said, but I'm also not sure that there will ever be a way to ensure that racism doesn't fester underneath whatever actions we take to try to get rid of it. I don't think that the tactics being used by BLM (and/or antifa) are very effective, nor do I think they are doing much other than to divide our nation even more.

              The wrong type of law enforcement reform w

            • The problem is that as soon as the protests turned violent, the protester's points started to fall on deaf ears. People don't listen to violent protesters, they fear them and demand protection from the violence. Which means that if you're protesting police behavior, you really screwed yourself because you're going to get more cops and fewer supporters.
        • You do realize that violent protests only create the need and demand for more police, right? And since violence puts a rush on that demand nobody has the time to weed out the bad ones first; so, if anything, you'll end up with more "racist cops". Combine that with the backlash a cause receives when protests become violent and it's just incredibly counterproductive. More of what you want less of, and less of what you need more of (popular support).

          Gandhi and MLK were famously successful because they wer

          • Gandhi and MLK were famously successful because they were non-violent. If violence was used against them, they remained steadfast.

            And people learned that lesson very well. Especially those in power. They know that peaceful protest works, so they make sure protests always end in violence.

  • Let's pretend four murders were put to trial. Murderer #4 goes to the stand, and asks the court why he's being tried for murder, because he's only killed one person, while the other three each killed two. Does that mean murder #4 is innocent? Of course not.

    • Since when is it wrong to operate a business and turn a profit? Our entire economy is based on this being a good thing.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        maybe read the first sentence of the summary? IT'S AN ANTITRUST PROBLEM. there are specific laws they are violating
  • "The most popular messaging service in the U.S. is iMessage. The fastest growing app is TikTok. The most popular app for video is YouTube. The fastest growing ads platform is Amazon. The largest ads platform is Google."

    Why would companies spend $$$ on Facebook then?

  • Blame the users (Score:3, Interesting)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @07:29PM (#60345491)

    People choose to use facebook because it provides a service people want. You can't blame facebook that people want to swim in poop. Nobody is forced to use facebook for anything.

  • ah yes, the old ruse of going off script with a well rehearsed script designed to give the impression that there is no need for regulation
  • I mean, going from 0 to 1 customer is infinity percent growth.
    Adding a 2nd customer is then only 100% growth.
    It continues downhill from there.
  • Wasted money

  • Everyone else is doing it!

    Do I get that right?

    What IS it? Have ALL the C level execs in the country become three year olds?

    • Have ALL the C level execs in the country become three year olds?

      When has it ever been otherwise?

      • LOL, You may actually be right.

        However, there WAS a time the business owners sometimes did things that made them look pretty grown up.

        Henry J Kaiser wanted his workers to be healthy and able bodied to be able to work for him... So he made a health care plan for them.
        Yeah, he had his own motives, but it WAS the right thing to do.

        Today, it's been corrupted into just another insurance company, but it called Kaiser Permanente.

        On the other hand, there was Henry Ford, the pseudo nazi.

        Go figure

  • ...after all, he equivocates (well, maybe whines) very well. Bonus points for not having gone bankrupt 4 (or is it 6) times.
  • With nearly 3.23 users.

    Twitter's nearly 1/10th their size and ranks #12 (and Twitter needs to be dragged in front of Congress to answer too).

  • I dont understand this, a company which dominates the pc world, has a monopoly in the business world in several areas and is actively abusing it to push other offerings. Has a massive advertising department including privacy invasive data gathering. Has the biggest business social network . And he is not invited, bizar.
  • If Marky had said, "less than a penny", that'd be fine.
  • Zuck is trying to claim the 'market' FB doesn't have a monopoly in is ALL ADVERTISING. FB might make money with advertising but it is not an advertising company. TV and newpapers make money through advertising as well but nothing in TV impacts whether or not a paper has a monopoly or anti-trust concerns.

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      We barely own 10% of every advertising dollar spent by anyone on any platform ever!!! That is way less than I consider satisfactory and you are calling us a monopoly just because we function as a gatekeeper with a direct jack to the eyeballs of virtually every man, woman, and child in the US and most of the world? PREPOSTEROUS!!!

  • It's completely scripted. Are you that dumb for real, or just pretending in order to push a fake narrative?
  • Sounds like Zuck just made a decent case for ALL tech giants to be broken up, then.

PURGE COMPLETE.

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