Gulf News

Facebook’s China foray may just work

Zuckerberg’s charm offensive may pay off yet given that technology and social media evolve rapidly in the country

-

acebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is willing to try anything to get his company back into China. Publicly, he launched a charm offensive that included learning Mandarin and offering Chinese President Xi Jinping the chance to name his first child (he declined). Less publicly, but no less important, the New York Times reports that his company has developed tools to prevent sensitive posts from appearing in Facebook feeds in “specific geographic areas”.

It’s a bold move that underscore­s just how hard Facebook is hunting for its next billion users. But even if the new tools convinces China’s government to lift its ban on Facebook, the country’s 700 million internet users have little reason to join. They have plenty of social networks of their own, most of them more advanced and more convenient. As Zuckerberg surely knows, the business case for a move onto the mainland looks dismal. So why is Facebook still so interested? History would certainly suggest caution. In 2008, when Facebook launched a Chinese-language version, it managed to attract a mere 285,000 mainland members — out of an internet population of more than 225 million. Meanwhile, competing platforms, especially Tencent’s QQ, were signing up tens of millions. The next year, Facebook was blocked by the government, obliterati­ng any chance to catch up with China’s online entreprene­urs.

Even worse (for Facebook) was that its Chinese rivals started innovating: Sina Weibo, once derided as a Twitter knock-off, instead became Twitter done better, embedding comment threads and videos long before the San Francisco-based service had contemplat­ed doing the same.

But the most revolution­ary service was Tencent’s WeChat, released in 2011. At first glance, it looked like just another social network and messaging service. Yet, it quickly morphed into something much richer, offering a free video-chat system, a taxi-hailing service, a bill-paying portal and a vast shopping environmen­t. Today it’s possible to bank on the system and send money to anyone. Invoking The Lord of the Rings, some users joke that it’s the “one app to rule them all”. It now has more than 700 million users, including nearly everyone with internet access in China — and another 70 million overseas.

Compared to WeChat, Facebook is a desert, with little allure to Chinese users. There aren’t any public statistics on how many mainlander­s use Facebook, but in my experience they’re mostly Chinese who have lived or worked in the West, want to maintain friendship­s overseas and have access to the technical means to avoid government blockades. For those without such connection­s, Facebook’s only theoretica­l appeal is that it provides access to news, posts and videos that are otherwise censored.

But Facebook still has one thing going for it, which is surely on Zuckerberg’s mind: Technology and social media evolve rapidly in China. Only two years ago, Sina Weibo was China’s biggest and most popular social-media platform. Then, after a government crackdown, it lost its political edge and many of its most popular users, and was left for dead.

It’s too late for Facebook to jump on the live-streaming bandwagon, but Zuckerberg and his colleagues are certainly taking note that a politicall­y neutered site, focused on celebritie­s and short videos, can command the attention of hundreds of millions of Chinese — and thereby remake a beleaguere­d, left-for-dead social network. Zuckerberg’s charm offensive, in other words, may pay off yet. Adam Minter is based in Asia, where he covers politics, culture, business and junk.

www.gulfnews.com/opinions

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates