Bangkok Post

Facebook unveils big audio push

Tech giant expands Spotify partnershi­p

- GLENN CHAPMAN

Facebook Inc is adding podcasts and “live audio rooms” in a push to get people talking and take on the fast-growing audio-based app Clubhouse.

“We think a lot of magic happens at the intersecti­on of audio formats, as well as at the confluence of text, audio and video,” Facebook app chief Fidji Simo said in a blog post on Monday.

Facebook’s plan to weave audio offerings into the social network comes as it works to prevent losing users to Clubhouse.

Facebook has seen a steady rise in users opting for voice, from audio calls at the social network to leaving spoken messages using WhatsApp of Messenger.

The Silicon Valley titan is building new audio creation tools Simo described as “like having a sound studio in your pocket.”

The tools will let people create shortform Soundbites such as jokes, anecdotes, or spontaneou­s thoughts, according to Simo.

“While we’re big believers in the power of short-form audio, we also know that some stories and conversati­ons deserve more airtime,” she said.

More than 170 million people are connected to Facebook pages centred on podcasts, and some 35 million users are members of podcast fan groups, but listening to one required leaving the social network.

“Within the next few months, you’ll be able to listen to podcasts directly on the Facebook app — both while using the app or when the app is background­ed,” Simo said.

As part of the move into podcasts, Facebook will be expanding its partnershi­p with Spotify so users can share and listen to podcasts, according to the company.

Facebook also planned to begin testing Live Audio Rooms, expected the feature to be available to all users by the middle of this year.

To make its audio offerings sustainabl­e for the long term, Facebook is building in ways for people creating content to make money, according to Simo.

“Creators hosting Live Audio Rooms will be able to get paid directly by fans, and Facebook plans to add the option to charge for access,’’ Simo said.

Safety and privacy safeguards are also being added to audio features, according to the social network.

The news came a day after Clubhouse said it closed a new funding round as the popular live audio app struggles to scale up in response to demand. The latest round gives the startup a valuation of some $4 billion, according to sources.

Launched last year, the San Franciscob­ased platform is looking to establish itself as the standard-bearer for digital audio and has already inspired copycat products.

“Facebook’s move is a natural response to a competitiv­e threat,” tech analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group.

“It you do nothing, you could become MySpace,” he added, referring to a pioneering social network that faded into oblivion after Facebook arrived.

Facebook’s pattern has been to either buy start-ups the pose potential threats or to copy features that are attracting users, the analyst noted.

While riding the hot trend in audiocentr­ic online socialisin­g is smart of Facebook, squashing Clubhouse could add to scrutiny it already faces from antitrust regulators, according to Enderle.

“When a competitor comes along providing your customers something that you aren’t, you don’t have a lot of choices in how to respond.”

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