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U.K. regulator orders Facebook parent company Meta to sell Giphy

The U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) officially ruled that Meta (formerly known as Facebook) should unwind its acquisition of GIF-making and sharing site Giphy.

The CMA ruling comes about a year and a half after Meta acquired Giphy and, according to the Financial Times, marks the first time the CMA has attempted to undo a completed acquisition by a tech giant. In a press release, the CMA said it reached the decision following an investigation that found the acquisition could harm competition between social media platforms.

Specifically, the CMA said that Meta could use the acquisition to deny or limit other platforms’ access to Giphy and thus drive more traffic to Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram. Moreover, the CMA raised concerns that Meta could force platforms that use Giphy to provide more data to access GIFs. Finally, the CMA believed Giphy’s advertising services could have competed with Meta’s, but the advertising services were shut down because of the merger.

Ultimately, the CMA said that the concerns could “only be addressed by Facebook selling Giphy in its entirety to an approved buyer.”

Meta considering all options, including appeal

Naturally, Meta disagreed with the CMA decision and said it was considering all options, including appeal. The company’s E.U. director of policy communications, Robin Koch, telling The Verge in a statement:

“Both consumers and Giphy are better off with the support of our infrastructure, talent, and resources. Together, Meta and Giphy would enhance Giphy’s product for the millions of people, businesses, developers and API partners in the UK and around the world who use Giphy every day, providing more choices for everyone.”

The Verge also noted that Meta disputed the CMA’s competition concerns, indicating that Giphy’s advertising business never had a chance of becoming a viable competitor. Meta responded to the CMA’s findings, saying the regulator was “sending a chilling message to start-up entrepreneurs: do not build new companies because you will not be able to sell them.”

The comment refers to the fairly common (especially in tech) practice of building a start-up with an exit strategy consisting of being acquired by a bigger company.

On that note, it’s worth noting that Giphy raised $150 million USD in funding since it was founded, but hadn’t turned a profit before the acquisition and was reportedly running out of money. It’s believed that Meta purchased Giphy for $400 million USD (about $512 million CAD), which is less than previous valuations given by investors and was a sign of Giphy’s financial troubles.

Throughout the CMA’s investigation, Giphy’s more than 100 employees haven’t been able to become full Meta employees. However, Meta reportedly paid Giphy’s bills to keep it running.

Finally, the CMA recently fined Meta £50 million (roughly $85 million CAD) for failing to comply with the terms of its initial enforcement order in the investigation. The CMA said that Meta was “consciously refusing to report all the required information” about its compliance with the order.

The CMA investigation is part of broader scrutiny of tech giants that’s become more common in recent years. Multiple regulators are investigating Meta’s acquisition of customer service platform Kustomer. The CMA has raised objections to Nvidia’s purchase of Arm, the company behind the ARM chip designs. And, of course, there are ongoing regulatory investigations of Google and Apple.

Source: CMA Via: The Verge

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Mobile Syrup

Oculus Black Friday 2021 sale offers up to 52 percent off games, experiences

Meta is running a sale for Black Friday 2021 on the Oculus Store that offers up to 52 percent off various VR games and experiences.

See below for some of the most notable deals:

Oculus’ Black Friday sale runs until November 28th. The full list of promotions can be found here.

Image credit: Meta/Lucasfilm

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Mobile Syrup

Meta teams up with Canadian artist for Native American Heritage Month

Facebook Meta has teamed up with Canadian-based Indigenous artist Alanah Astehtsi Otsistohkwa (Morningstar) Jewell to make new global stickers for Instagram, Messenger, Messenger Kids, as well as one for Instagram Shops, in celebration of Native American Heritage Month.

Those in Canada and all around the world can use Jewell’s stickers during the month from their sticker tray.

Meta says its initiative builds on its work to support Indigenous communities in Canada by making a “celebratory, respectful and empathetic environment.”

The symbols and themes in Jewell’s art derive from conversations she’s had with her global community of Indigenous creators on Instagram.

Jewell is an illustrator, painter and muralist and organizes local Indigenous Art Markets through @IAmKitchener on Instagram.

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Mobile Syrup

You can finally see Instagram photos on Twitter

Instagram has announced that users can now preview photos when posting a link on Twitter.

The photo-sharing platform revealed the news with a tweet from its official Twitter account. Now when you share an Instagram link a Twitter card will appear featuring the photo shared, rather than an ugly clickable link.

The two social media giants have been feuding for years since native Instagram integration was removed from Twitter in 2012. This shift comes as Instagram parent company Facebook makes sweeping changes, including a complete rebrand.

It’s unknown whether Facebook’s recent shake up had anything to with this change or if it was just something that had been in the works for quite some time. Either way, users of both platforms will be all over this new feature.

Source: @Instagram

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Leaked image from Meta (formerly Facebook) app shows in-development smartwatch

Facebook Meta could be working on a smartwatch with a front-facing camera and slightly rounded screen, according to images found in one of the company’s iPhone apps.

As reported by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, app developer Steve Moser found the picture of the smartwatch inside Meta’s ‘View’ app used to control the company’s new smart glasses. The image depicts a watch with a square shape and heavily rounded corners.

Interestingly, the watch also sports a display notch that houses a camera. Many smartphones incorporate a notch to fit in a selfie camera while also minimizing wasted space around the display. However, the Meta smartwatch bucks the usual trend and places the notch on the bottom of the display.

Bloomberg reports that the watch features a control button on the right side, detachable wrist straps and what appears to be a button on the top of the watch case.

Meta could launch a smartwatch as early as 2022, but Bloomberg says the company hasn’t made a final decision on timing. A source familiar with the product confirmed to Bloomberg that Meta was working on three generations of the watch aimed at different release time frames.

The watch’s presence in the View app suggests it could be managed through that app when it launches, similar to Meta’s smart glasses. Further, code inside the app indicates Meta could call the watch ‘Milan.’ Finally, the watch could act as an input device or accessory for Meta’s virtual reality and augmented reality (VR and AR) headsets.

Bloomberg notes that if Meta does launch a smartwatch next year, it might need to contend with three new Apple Watch models — an Apple Watch Series 8, a new Watch SE and possibly a rugged Apple Watch aimed at athletes.

Source: Bloomberg

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Mobile Syrup

Meta says it won’t require Facebook accounts for VR headsets

Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, says it won’t require a Facebook account to use its VR headsets.

Incoming Meta CTO Andrew “Boz” Bosworth made the announcement in a broader blog post discussing the Facebook name change.

“We’re working on new ways to log into Quest that won’t require a Facebook account, landing sometime next year,” Bosworth wrote. “This is one of our highest priority areas of work internally.”

This is a notable reversal for Meta, which had previously said Facebook accounts would eventually be required to use its Meta Quest VR headsets (formerly Oculus Quest). It was a highly controversial move from a company that has already faced immense scrutiny over privacy, among other subjects.

The company also says it’s no longer using the Oculus branding “to make clear” that its VR division is tied to Meta. However, the names of the company’s apps — Facebook, Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp — will remain the same.

In general, the tech giant’s overall name change is meant to signal its intention to expand beyond a social media company into a “metaverse” company. To put it simply, this is a world in which avatars of people can interact, work, play, go to concerts and other activities. This will leverage augmented and virtual reality technology and be built over a period of five to ten years, according to the company.

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PS2 Classic GTA: San Andreas is coming to VR with the Oculus Quest 2

During its Connect 2021 event, Facebook Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed that Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is coming to the Oculus Quest 2.

It’s unclear when the game will release, how much it will cost or even really what the PlayStation 2 classic will look like running in virtual reality (VR). During the event, only a brief snippet of the game in action was shown off. Oculus’ website lists GTA: San Andreas for the Quest 2 as a “project many years in the making.”

Remasters of GTA: San Andreas, Vice City and San Andreas are set to release on November 11th across Xbox and PlayStation consoles, as well as mobile devices.

As fun as it would be to check out Grove Street in VR, I’m not sure a title like San Andreas could be played from the first-person perspective. That said, GTA V on the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 featured a first-person mode, so maybe bringing San Andreas to VR isn’t that far-fetched.

Resident Evil 4 was recently ported to the Oculus Quest. While I haven’t tested out the game myself, it has received pretty positive reviews so far.

During its Connect 2021 event, Facebook also revealed that it’s changing its name to ‘Meta.’ 

Source: Facebook

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Facebook renames itself ‘Meta’

The Facebook company, not the social network, will now be known as Meta.

After about a week of speculation, the company that owns Facebook, Instagram, Oculus and WhatsApp is now Meta.

The plan is to move the company’s branding furth away from the Facebook social network as it moves more into building the VR metaverse and other new tech projects. If you go Meta.com it redirects you to a Facebook site that explains the new VR space and what Zuckerberg is trying to create. This involves both VR and AR and so much more to really build out a digital world that is still intertwined with the real world in subtle ways.

While this all sounds crazy and futuristic, that’s because it is and a lot of it is a long way off according to Zuckerberg.

This also follows recent allegations that Facebook and Instagram are bad for people, especially younger girls and a push from U.S. government regulators to break the company up.

Source: Meta

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Wow, this leaked internal Facebook video is so incredibly cringe

Facebook has done some truly terrible things, but this leaked internal benefits video might be the peak.

Look, every company has internal videos for employees to communicate some important information, whether it’s about benefits, workplace rules, whatever. Most of them are very cringey. But as with so many things, Facebook is determined to be much worse than everyone else.

And so we have this:

It’s worth noting that the above video is a reposted copy since the original video was made private (hopefully because Facebook realized how shameful it was to be publicly associated with this.

Buzzfeed News reporter Katie Notopoulous first posted the video on Twitter, calling it more “damning than anything in the Haugen leak.”

The only tolerable part of the video is when they jump into the “metaverse” and several dead-eyed virtual reality characters stare into your soul while reading off information about benefits. Well, tolerable is a stretch. But hey, at least we got a tease of our digital future!

The Metaverse.

I feel sorry for all involved with this video — both those who made it and those who chose to watch it. I’d like to end on a positive note, but I don’t think there is one, unless this one video manages to singlehandedly destroy a massive company with a terrifying amount of power. The cringe is that powerful, but I don’t think it — or anything — can contend with Zuckerberg’s unflinching desire to ruin everything with pokes and likes.

Source: @katienotopoulous Via: Input

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Facebook to introduce features to ‘nudge’ teens away from damaging content

Following a testimony from whistleblower Frances Haugen claiming that Facebook and its subsidiary Instagram prioritize profits over the safety of its young user base, Facebook has decided to introduce numerous new features, including pop-ups urging teens to take a break from using its photo-sharing app Instagram and “nudging” them if they’re frequently looking at content that’s not conducive to their well-being.

Facebook vice president of global affairs Nick Clegg commented on the upcoming safety features during CNN’s State of the Union show.

“We’re going to introduce something which I think will make a considerable difference, which is where our systems see that the teenager is looking at the same content over and over again and it’s content which may not be conducive to their well-being, we will nudge them to look at other content,” says Clegg.

In addition, adults will be able to monitor what their kids are doing online if they choose to, and the platform will prompt them to “take a break” from Instagram. However, on the flip side, Clegg says that plans for Instagram Kids have been currently put on hold.

While no timeframe for when the new features will be released was provided, a Facebook spokesperson (via The Verge) said the features are “not testing yet but will soon.”

Source: CNN