In the first quarter of 2024, Meta made $36.45 billion dollars - $12.37 billion dollars of which was pure profit. Though the company no longer reports daily active users, it now uses another metric: “family daily active people.” This number refers to “registered and logged-in users of one or more of Facebook’s Family products who visited at least one of these products on a particular day.”

This quiet, seemingly innocent change to how Meta reports growth is significant insofar as it will no longer have to report its Daily Active or Monthly active users, meaning that the only source of truth in Meta’s growth story is a vague growth metric that could be manipulated to mean just about anything. Three billion “daily active people” across Meta’s “family” combines WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Facebook Messenger (which I’m confident it counts separately), Oculus, and Threads.

    • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      It is more that they are not growing, and that means dying in their business model. By not reporting an accurate metric of user engagement, they are hiding the stagnation or loss. Background logins from apps are likely also hiding the real picture of user engagement. Without active user engagement they lose their revenue, data harvesting and advertising.

      So there are signs that they are in a downturn, which will lead to irrelevance and failure.

      • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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        5 months ago

        Once upon a time, after growth companies would shift from a growth stock to a stable stock. Instead of telling wall street “you can make money here” it would mean “you can keep your money relatively safe here”. We apparently don’t do that anymore. Seems like it would have been perfect for them.

        • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          That would work if they had a stable business model and produced something everybody needed or wanted, like diapers or alcohol. Their entire business model requires they keep users engaged and user count growing.

          People will leave Meta the more Meta tries to make more off of a stagnant userbase, which will death spiral.

        • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          we used to call that ‘value investing’ and get rewarded with reliable dividends. useful during periods of high interest rates, which stunted growth.

    • Balinares@pawb.social
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      5 months ago

      Astounding, isn’t it? That’s publicly traded companies for you. The company’s objective is to keep its stock up and up and up. That means shareholders must want to keep buying the stock, which in turn means that the company must demonstrate that its value will keep growing, so that by buying the stock today the shareholders will get a positive return tomorrow.

      Of course, the universe is finite and no growth is forever. The end state for such companies is not bankruptcy, at least in the immediate, but, more or less, the IBM fate: a previously uber-dominant mastodon whose market capitalization is now worth maybe one tenth of its modern competitors. The fact that it’s still turning a profit is only secondary: none of the big tech shops want to be the next IBM. Their executives are, after all, mostly paid in stocks.

      And that’s how you end up with companies that are making amounts of revenue you and I can’t even comprehend flail in a panic like they’re on the edge of the precipice whenever the technological landscape shifts.

      It’s both fascinating and remarkably dumb.

    • Droggelbecher@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Since it has shareholders, the only way for it to stay in business is ever-increasing growth. Profit themselves aren’t enough. It needs to grow faster and faster so that dividends keep increasing, which is the goal.

        • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          traditionally a stock price is the net present value of all future dividends. just like a home price is the net present value of all future rent payments. of course its all off the rails now due to extended periods of minimal interest rates and dollar cancer.

          • pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online
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            5 months ago

            What? The stock price is based on the valuation of the company, not future dividends. Many stocks don’t pay dividends at all, or do so rarely.

            Similarly, a home’s price is the market value of the home, not how much the rent/mortgage payments would be.

            • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              the valuation of a publicly traded company is traditionally the future dividends of outstanding shares. stocks that dont pay much dividends are counting on a growth strategy, capturing market share.

              again with the homes, the market value of the home is traditionally based on what future revenues can be extracted out of it.

              ‘the price is the value’ should be based on something other than bigger fools.

  • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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    5 months ago

    Facebook’s capital and access to oceans of customer data sure isn’t going to die, though. Maybe mutate

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          5 months ago

          Yeah, my point is that there are fewer and fewer markets that let the profit off of people this way. Either they die or they find an ethical way to make money, that doesn’t violate peoples data rights.

          • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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            5 months ago

            That’s undeniably a good thing, but I’m still cynical that capital will ever find a truly “ethical” niche to exploit.

            Of course that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to legally constrain it as much as possible, as I’ve just learned has been done in the EU, thank you!

  • undercrust@lemmy.ca
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    5 months ago

    All I need are good alternatives to:

    • find or coordinate local events
    • post used things for sale

    and Facebook is totally irrelevant to me. The way people switched from Kijiji to Marketplace absolutely screwed me over for leaving Meta.

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      5 months ago

      Those two are really the only good use cases today for facebook. Insane how Marketplace pretty much overnight almost killed local listing sites. Events I don’t see good alternatives, don’t have much hopes for that one, time will show

    • Papamousse@beehaw.org
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      5 months ago

      Absolutely, I’m in QC and we had a couple of way to sell things, lespac, kijiji, etc. but Marketplace is now 100% the king of it, it’s quite incredible especially in big city like Montréal. Others platforms to sell are quite dead.

      The other thing I’m using FB for, is groups, that replaced good old web forums… On FB there’s group of everything, costco addicts, dollarama addicts, plants addicts, with ten of thousands of locals people.

    • can@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      I was very disheartened to see people switch from Kijiji (Canada). However I thinj it depends on what you’re looking for and where you are. I’ve checked Marketplace with my partner’s account and at least for where I live and my hobby Kijiji is still used.

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        5 months ago

        I think it also depends on the locale.

        When I look at both Kijiji and Facebook marketplace, I see far more listings on Kijiji.

  • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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    Don’t be dissuaded by the weak opening argument - finish the article. At least:

    When you look at Instagram or Facebook, I want you to try and think of them less as social networks, and more as a form of anthropological experiment. Every single thing you see on either platform is built or selected to make you spend more time on the app and see more things that Meta wants you to see, be they ads, sponsored content, or suggested groups that you can interact with, thus increasing the amount of your “time spent” on the app, and increasing the amount of “meaningful interactions” you have with content. …

    … the logic here is that the more stuff there is on Facebook or Instagram, the more likely you are to run into something you’ll interact with, even if said interaction is genuinely bad. Horwitz notes that in April 2016, Meta analyzed Facebook’s most successful political groups, finding that a third of them “routinely featured content that was racist and conspiracy-minded,” with their growth heavily-driven by Facebook’s “Groups You Should Join” and “Discover” features, algorithmic tools that Facebook used to recommend content. The researcher in question added that “sixty-four percent of all extremist group joins are due to our recommendation tools.

    When the researcher took their concerns to Facebook’s “Protect and Care” team, they were told that there was nothing the team could do as “the accounts creating the content were real people, and Facebook intentionally had no rules mandating truth, balance or good faith.” …

    Society’s mechanisms are far too slow and lack the precision to deal with Mark Zuckerberg — a man that acts with a lack of morality that I find putrid — and the complex machine he’s used to torture humans for profit and power. And as I’ve mentioned before, Mark Zuckerberg can never be fired. We’re stuck with him forever. He can — and will — run this company into the ground.

    While Elon musk is a greedy and churlish executive, and a disgusting, shameful man, Mark Zuckerberg is something entirely different. He is far from stupid, and unlike Musk seemingly feels no compulsion for anyone to like him. He craves numerical dominance, at any cost. He must force human beings to use Facebook, and once they are there, he must make them move in the way wishes and do the things he wishes all so that he can see the number go up.

    rekt

  • YⓄ乙 @aussie.zone
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    5 months ago

    Companies whose shares are trading above $100 will never die.

    Articles like this are just clickbait. Fb provides a services and many ignorant people do use it everyday. They have fb services running in all the major smartphones even after you delete the app as general public don’t know how to remove the service.

    So yeah, fb will never die

  • magic_lobster_party@kbin.run
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    5 months ago

    I don’t think they’re dying just because they change one metric. It might just be that the old metric no longer aligns with their goals.

    They’ve probably realized it’s not feasible to put all eggs in one basket and try to collect all users in one big platform. Instead they might aim to build a more diverse set of platforms.

    • Xer0@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      It definitely is dying. The younger people are dropping off because they don’t want to be on a social media network with their mum and their fucking nan.

    • CrypticCoffee@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Which they could also report on. The fact they’re removing a standard metric they’ve relied on, rather than relegate it, shows they have fear this metric is going to be detrimental to publish. You can fairly safely assume it’s going to go down. It’s no longer sexy, tik tok is killing it, and most that would be on it, are, and are discovering it’s not greatly beneficial to them and spending less time on it. It is the start of the decline. How long and how fast is the thing we do not know.

    • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 months ago

      I feel like people just collectively forget how much Facebook owns now. WhatsApp, Instagram, (formerly) Oculus VR, etc

  • cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    I recently deleted my Meta-account, and I hope they will be a thing of the past in the not too distant future. Zuck can get fucked.

  • ynazuma@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    The only people on facebook are your racist uncle, hippie aunt, and your crackhead neighbour looking for used panties on marketplace