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Facebook Says It Is 'Absolutely Not Threatening' To Leave Europe After Many Welcomed the Move 153

Markus Reinisch, Vice President of Public Policy Europe at Meta, writing on company's blog: There has been reporting in the press that we are "threatening" to leave Europe because of the uncertainty over EU-US data transfers mechanisms. This is not true. Like all publicly-traded companies, we are legally required to disclose material risks to our investors. Last week, as we have done in our previous four financial quarters, we disclosed that continuing uncertainty over EU-US data transfers mechanisms poses a threat to our ability to serve European consumers and operate our business in Europe. We have absolutely no desire to withdraw from Europe; of course we don't. But the simple reality is that Meta, like many other businesses, organisations and services, relies on data transfers between the EU and the US in order to operate our global services. Further reading: We're Fine Without Facebook, German and French Ministers Say.
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Facebook Says It Is 'Absolutely Not Threatening' To Leave Europe After Many Welcomed the Move

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  • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:32PM (#62250407)

    There's probably half a dozen small, free social media platforms that would be perfectly adequate replacements for Facebook. "Allo" comes to mind, but there's others. All they lack is subscriber numbers. If Facebook creates a giant vaccuum in Europe by pulling out, hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of Europeans will flock to them...and in the process drag along millions more friends, relatives and acquaintances from all over the world.

    Given how hated Facebook is, it will be the beginning of the end for them. They know this.

    • by Type44Q ( 1233630 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:27PM (#62250585)

      Bluff called; Zuck's nictitating membranes were said to have blinked.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Given how hated Facebook is, it will be the beginning of the end for them. They know this.

      Speaking of what they know, I'm curious; do you think the hate is Too Big To Fail too?

      • My friend, that is an excellent question. Seriously, it's one of those questions that makes you really stop and think.

      • by vlad30 ( 44644 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @06:22PM (#62250983)

        Speaking of what they know, I'm curious; do you think the hate is Too Big To Fail too?

        In Tech No one is Too Big To Fail, Ask Myspace, Altavista, AOL, wordperfect all were leaders and the biggest in their respective market at one stage. In Tech the fall can be very fast to

        • Speaking of what they know, I'm curious; do you think the hate is Too Big To Fail too?

          In Tech No one is Too Big To Fail, Ask Myspace, Altavista, AOL, wordperfect all were leaders and the biggest in their respective market at one stage. In Tech the fall can be very fast to

          We are in a different era of tech now. Let's take your largest example on that list; AOL never threatened democracy or free speech, and never stood a damn chance to do so either.

          The same, certainly cannot be said about today's social media that serves many politician, leader, and President. And if they're more left than right in the political spectrum, they are quite dependent on it. Dependent enough that they cannot afford to have the ideology controlling that social media platform, switch against the

          • Remember kids, when it's helping the Arab Spring or protests in Hong Kong, fomenting revolution is good. But when it's a few AM Radio jackoffs and Aunty Whitebread spreading crappy memes, it's A Danger to Democracy and Must Be Stopped... no matter the cost.
        • Not sure that holds anymore, the Facebook tentacles reach too deep. People use it even when they don't realize they use it. It was always clear when myspace et all were being used.

    • After Brexit, vote leave for Facebook !
      "Facexit" ?

  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:36PM (#62250417)
    "Facebook Bad" has legs of its own own now. Once every desperate freelancer out there is scouring your every word for something to spin into some misleading headline, which then reliably proceeds to get several thousand of the same "Facebook Bad" posts on reddit for the Nth time, it's safe to say you're going to have a hard time getting that horse back into the barn.
  • Oh come on now... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by larwe ( 858929 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:36PM (#62250419)

    This was absolutely a case of Facebook saying "We'll take our ball and leave, and your businesses who rely on Facebook advertising and exposure will all wither and die and you'll lose tax revenue"... Followed by the EU calling that bluff and collectively saying "We have plenty of other balls here, trust me, life will go on if you leave. The door is over there---".

    The most annoying thing for me will be that I have friends in Europe whom I can only contact over FB Messenger at the moment. Of course this doesn't earn FB a dime, so it's irrelevant to the conversation :)

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by hdyoung ( 5182939 )
      I thought that too. I sincerely dislike Facebook’s business model, as well as their attitude towards misinformation (and ethnic cleansing). but on this one they were innocent. They are stuck between two absolutely opposite US and EU laws. If the current laws/regulations aren’t adjusted somehow, they will have no choice but to pull out. That’s the point they were trying to make.

      I cant believe Im saying it, but Facebook seems to be right on this one.
      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        You can just incorporate an EU facebook entity separate from US facebook with no feeding of data between the two. No leaving necessary.

      • Re:Oh come on now... (Score:5, Informative)

        by Todd Knarr ( 15451 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:55PM (#62250485) Homepage

        False, because US laws don't forbid what EU laws require. They merely don't require it. FB could absolutely align it's US data policies with EU requirements, then it'd be in compliance with the law everywhere. It's just that if they did that they wouldn't have much data from their users to sell to their customers and there goes their nice juicy revenue stream.

        • Not quite. The Cloud act makes that far less black and white than you make it seem.

        • But then that makes Facebook less useful and more annoying for everyone. Letâ(TM)s only keep the consequences of stupid anti-internet laws to the people that passed them.

          • by jd ( 1658 )

            Privacy is hardly anti-Internet, a right to control your own data has been around since the early 90s and has caused absolutely ZERO disruption or harm to the Internet. Honestly, if you're going to start throwing out bogus complaints, at leat make it a bogus complaint people might believe in.

            • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

              I think that's what he means by "less useful and more annoying." Suppose you ran a slaughterhouse and the government passed a law saying that you can't harm livestock. Don't you see how that would be less useful to your customers? Sure, it wouldn't disrupt or harm the internet at all, but what about people who want to infect you with ads?

              Won't someone please think of the assholes?!?

        • It's not just about the data requirements, it's also about the tax loopholes being used. If you can't shift data shift data freely between the EU and the US then you can't headquarter your business in Ireland while dealing with US customers.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by larwe ( 858929 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:00PM (#62250509)
        I don't see how you reached "FB is innocent". They have a business model that relies on access to user data, and that is designed around very very loose US privacy laws and (explicitly) an attitude of "move fast and break things" - use the data in profitable ways, and deal with any incoming lawsuits as they arise, dial back data usage as necessary. US laws do not apply in the EU; the EU has stronger standards (still, arguably, way too weak - but way stronger than US standards). Basically FB is analogous to a candy made with artificial dyes that are legal in the US, but not legal in the EU. FB exported its candy to the EU, and the EU is saying "hey, you can't sell that here". FB is protesting that it would be expensive to set up a new factory to make candies with EU-compliant colorings in them. To which the only possible response is: "Yes. Complying with the law will cost you money. You go figure out if you're going to make money or lose money on this deal, and decide accordingly whether you want to be in this market". It's capitalism 101. Actually it's even more basic than that, it's pre-capitalism 100 :)
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Oh come on now... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:05PM (#62250519) Journal

      > The most annoying thing for me will be that I have friends in Europe whom I can only contact over FB Messenger

      E-mail isn't a thing in the EU or something?

      I have to assume you're at least old enough to remember how people stayed in touch before 2004... or possibly old enough to remember before the internet.

      So I guess it's annoying that you have to use FM Messenger, but not as annoying as doing something else...
      =Smidge=

    • This was absolutely a case of Facebook saying "We'll take our ball and leave, and your businesses who rely on Facebook advertising and exposure will all wither and die and you'll lose tax revenue"... Followed by the EU calling that bluff and collectively saying "We have plenty of other balls here, trust me, life will go on if you leave. The door is over there---".

      But not only the EU but a shitload of the comments on European Reddit subs and other social media were very anti-Facebook...comments like nothing of any value lost, we'll be better without it etc.

    • >This was absolutely a case of Facebook saying...

      No. It was Facebook putting in worst case scenarios into the financial risks section of their SEC filing, as they are required to do. Anybody reading that and not seeing it for what it was is not familiar with reading company reports.

  • Dam! (Score:2, Informative)

    "Facebook Says It Is 'Absolutely Not Threatening' To Leave Europe" And I had hopes they'd close here in the US. A World without Facebook will get an IQ pop.
    I just had to listen to a relative tell us how Facebook won't let you type the word "fat" because of hate and divisiveness filters but that was OK because she and her friends just typed "f@t". I just kept my mouth shut and listened.

    Social Media is such a wasteland.
    • the future i look forward to is tom and zuck sitting in a bar sipping appletinis lamenting about how the ride is never as long as you want it to be.

  • Quote: "But the simple reality is that Meta, like many other businesses, organisations and services, relies on data transfers between the EU and the US in order to operate our global services."

    The kind of data Facebook/Meta hoards? FALSE.

    • "between the EU and the US" read this and wondered why would they want to pay to transport all that data between the target areas? mmmm Unless all data goes to the market with the friendliest laws and regulations for long term asset storage and monetization.
      • by suutar ( 1860506 )

        I can think of a number of reasons why storage would be distributed and replicated. Like not having to make a query across the atlantic every time I see the profile picture of an author I follow who lives in Northern Ireland.

  • Not fake news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fermion ( 181285 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:43PM (#62250447) Homepage Journal
    Meta definitely indicated that it could not comply with requests to keep data in the EU.

    https://www.socialmediatoday.c... [socialmediatoday.com]

    As mentioned, this is the same issue Tik Tok has with US data. It seems very cumbersome to keep data locked into geopolitical regions, and I understand why Meta would want to flee the EU. OTOH, doing so would give other countries a simple method for ridding themselves of the scourge.

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      This is a non-fact. It is ABSOLUTELY possible to comply with the request, the factual statement is that it is 1) costly in terms of datacenter isolation, and 2) it cuts FB revenue. I mean, you don't need to have any technical knowledge to know that one way to comply is to have completely separate services - Facebook (EU) and Facebook (non-EU), which share no connections. That's obviously the ad absurdum approach, but you can build up from that to a model that has separate datacenters connected by a filtered
      • by brunes69 ( 86786 )

        Given that the entire purpose of a social network like Facebook is to share personal information, I fail to see how someone in the EU can be Facebook friends with someone in the US and not have their personal data transmit to US servers.

    • Totally bogus claim by FB and Tik Tok.

      They just want to spy on you and store the data they get in China where they can use it to harass you.

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:48PM (#62250463)

    "Metastasize". Fitting.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @03:53PM (#62250481) Journal
    ... every possible risk to our investors.

    That is why we say in our filings, We could do a totally stupid thing, and try to threaten to leave a market segment in what we thought would be a under the radar communication channel. But some pesky gadfly, completely could disregard our privacy, and could blabber it all over the place attracting lots of bad publicity. We might be forced to make a public retraction of our imagined confidential threat communication.

    • Uh... there's nothing private (express or implied) about SEC filings. They are very much public information, and read by thousands of people. No one even imagined this to be confidential, though they might have wished it were (but probably not even that).

      I imagine they did it more to try to get it noticed, in the hopes the EU would relax the rules for them.

      • by suutar ( 1860506 )

        Reportedly this has been in the last several filings, too.

      • Filings are not private nor confidential. But it is usually ignored by all. Then some "investor" would approach the law makers asking for help to mitigate the risk, conveying the threat in a roundabout, deniable way. Too bad they had to publicly retract what they hoped will be a sort of veiled threat.
  • by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:31PM (#62250605)

    Is that their business model is incompatible with the privacy laws in Europe. This is very insightful: there is no business case for them, unless they abuse every possible private aspect they can obtain from you. Crappy.

  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:35PM (#62250619)

    C'mon. They tried to trigger a user based groundswell of backlash against the EU government and it failed. That says a lot about the value of FB. Its hilarious that everyone invited them to leave the EU instead of getting upset about it.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by jezwel ( 2451108 )
        Businesses too, they all maintain a presence on whatever popular social media platforms are deemed worthwhile. Our company doesn't have a MySpace account for instance. If FB followed in it's footsteps you can be sure we'd remove our presence when it became more costly than it brought in.
  • Facebook presume the EU should cave, instead the said "OK, go ahead".
    A threat is only any good when you are willing to do it, and the other person cares.

    In this case Facebook was not willing and the EU did not care.
  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @04:54PM (#62250711) Homepage Journal

    Please leave the EU.

    And then leave Canada.

    And then leave the US.

  • ...but maybe someday.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Tuesday February 08, 2022 @08:06PM (#62251277)

    ... threatening to not leave Europe.

  • Please FecesBook - PLEASE PLEASE shut down!! Please!!!!
  • As a german citizen, I would not have the faintest objection to the idea getting rid of all services provided by Meta!

"Kill the Wabbit, Kill the Wabbit, Kill the Wabbit!" -- Looney Tunes, "What's Opera Doc?" (1957, Chuck Jones)

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