Houston Chronicle Sunday

Major tech companies are coming for Zoom

- By Mike Isaac and Sheera Frenkel

SAN FRANCISCO — As people turned in droves to video chatting app Zoom in recent weeks, the buzz caught Facebook’s attention. Inside the social network, that immediatel­y set off a scramble.

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, ordered employees to ramp up and focus on the company’s own video chat projects, especially as use of its products also increased, said three people with knowledge of the plans, who declined to be identified because the details are confidenti­al. On Facebook’s internal message boards, employees openly gawked at public data showing Zoom’s growing popularity, they said.

On Friday, Facebook unveiled one of its biggest expansions into videoconfe­rencing with several new video chat features and services. They included video group chats for as many as 50 people on Facebook Messenger, WhatsApp video calls for up to eight people and video calls in Facebook Dating.

Zuckerberg is not the only tech titan with Zoom on his mind. Google this month made its video chat app, Meet, more accessible through Gmail. Cisco recently promoted its Webex teleconfer­encing service as highly secure compared with Zoom. And Verizon announced last week that it was acquiring BlueJeans Network, a videoconfe­rencing service.

Tech and telecommun­ications giants are mobilizing against Zoom as the Silicon Valley company has become one of the biggest tech beneficiar­ies of the coronaviru­s outbreak. Over the past month, downloads of Zoom have increased 740 percent, according to App Annie, an analytics firm. Zoom has said it now has more than 300 million daily participan­ts, up from 10 million before the pandemic.

Facebook, Google and others want a piece of that success. Behind the scenes, people with knowledge of the companies said, employees are sore that they have not grabbed more of the same buzz as Zoom, especially because many of the giants have offered their own video chat software — like Google Meet — for years.

In targeting Zoom, the tech behemoths are following a playbook of deploying their vast resources to outmuscle a smaller, fast-rising competitor. Last year, Facebook and Google trained their sights on TikTok, the Chinesemad­e video app, which had become a hit with young audiences. Often, the largest companies have opened up their wallets and snapped up tiny rivals to eliminate them as competitio­n.

In an interview, Zuckerberg chafed at comparison­s to Zoom and said video chat was just beginning to be a larger phenomenon as people aimed to digitally connect in more intimate ways.

“The world was already trending in this direction before COVID-19,” Zuckerberg said while using the new Facebook Messenger video product. “This is the trend in general — the ability to feel more present, even when you’re not physically together.”

Zoom’s chief executive, Eric Yuan, said in an interview this month that his company was not thinking about competitio­n and was focused on users and their experience during a “once in a probably 100 years crisis.”

Zoom, founded in 2011 by

Yuan, a former Cisco executive, was designed to be easy to use and install. Unlike other video chat products, the app also has a popular grid view that lets people see everyone on a call at once, creating a more social atmosphere. The company, based in San Jose, Calif., went public last year.

When the spread of COVID-19 turbocharg­ed the video chat phenomenon, Zoom emerged as a clear front-runner, owing largely to word-of-mouth about its ease and simplicity. It has been the most downloaded app in Apple’s App Store for more than a month. The company is valued at around $47 billion, more than Slack and Pinterest.

But its success has been bumpy, with scrutiny falling on Zoom’s lack of security and privacy practices. Zoombombin­g — intentiona­lly disrupting other people’s Zoom sessions with pornograph­y or other forms of digital harassment — has grown so pervasive that the term has become a part of mainstream discourse.

Bigger tech and telecom companies are racing to catch up, even though they were earlier to roll out videoconfe­rencing services. Cisco acquired Webex in 2007 for $3.2 billion. Facebook has long hyped its own video chat offerings. Microsoft bought internet calling service Skype in 2011 for $8.5 billion.

This month, Google said it would plug Meet directly into Gmail so users could take video calls inside their email browser window. Google also is mimicking Zoom, releasing a grid-style view for Meet and adding features to improve video quality in low-light conditions. On Wednesday, Google added a noise-cancellati­on option for video calls and expanded the advanced features to all of its customers for free.

Google said Meet use was up more than 25 times what it was in January, with more than 2 million new user sign-ups every day.

After questions arose about Zoom’s privacy and security, competitor­s also rushed to assure customers that their offerings were safer. Javed Khan, a Cisco vice president, said that not only had use of Webex skyrockete­d — at one point, the company added 240,000 new users in 24 hours — but so had its security business.

“As the largest enterprise security company in the world, we’re helping our customers connect and collaborat­e, securely,” he said.

Few companies have been as attuned to Zoom’s rise as Facebook.

Zuckerberg recently galvanized several Facebook teams to accelerate their video chat product releases, including a desktop app for Facebook Messenger — which has a video chat feature front and center — this month. More than 700 million people now make calls across Messenger and WhatsApp each day, Zuckerberg said, making it clear that other features needed to be built in as soon as possible.

Those include Messenger Rooms, a way to quickly create video chat rooms using Facebook Messenger that can support dozens of people simultaneo­usly. Facebook also integrated video chat into its Dating product and plans to bring the ability to create Rooms to WhatsApp, Instagram Direct and other services.

Zuckerberg said Zoom felt more scheduled and a little less casual than Messenger Rooms. He said he wanted to make the video chat experience more serendipit­ous. “I don’t really think there’s anything today that you can display on an ad hoc basis that you’re hanging out and have whoever wants to join you over video,” he said. “Sometimes people compare what we do to other companies, like you did earlier with Zoom. I think the main thrust of how people are going to experience Rooms will be very different.”

Facebook’s augmented and virtual reality division, which offers a video communicat­ions device called Portal, has also been working with Zoom since January on a partnershi­p so people could make Zoom video calls on the gadget, according to three people with knowledge of the company’s plans.

“The world was already trending in this direction before COVID-19. This is the trend in general — the ability to feel more present, even when you’re not physically together.” Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook chief executive

 ?? Wilson Ring / Associated Press ?? With people’s social lives moved indefinite­ly online, tech companies want to unseat Zoom from its perch as the default for meetings.
Wilson Ring / Associated Press With people’s social lives moved indefinite­ly online, tech companies want to unseat Zoom from its perch as the default for meetings.

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