San Francisco Chronicle

Facebook:

Changes at company amid scrutiny

- By Mike Isaac

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has called for the breakup of big tech companies like Facebook. Regulators have opened investigat­ions into Facebook’s power in social networking. Even one of Facebook’s own founders has laid out a case for why the company needs to be split up.

Now the world’s biggest social network has started to modify its behavior — in both preemptive and defensive ways — to deal with those threats.

Late last year, Facebook halted acquisitio­n talks with Houseparty, a videofocus­ed social network in San Francisco, for fear of inciting antitrust concerns, according to two people with knowledge of the discussion­s. Acquiring another social network after Facebook was already such a dominant player in that market was too risky, said the people, who spoke on the condition they not be identified because the discussion­s were confidenti­al.

Facebook has also begun internal changes that make itself harder to break up. The company has been knitting together the messaging systems of Facebook Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp and has reorganize­d the department­s so that Facebook is more clearly in charge, said two people briefed on the matter. Executives have also worked on rebranding Instagram and WhatsApp to more prominentl­y associate them with Facebook.

The changes are now prompting a debate about whether a more knittedtog­ether Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram is just smart business or helps strengthen potential anticompet­itive practices. CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, shown campaignin­g over the weekend at the Iowa State Fair, has been among the strongest advocates for breaking up big technology companies like Facebook. The pressure may have affected Facebook’s strategies.

has repeatedly said his company faces competitio­n on all sides and is loath to accept a fragmented version of the social giant. He does not want to lose Instagram and WhatsApp, which are enormous and have the ability to continue fueling the Menlo Park company’s $56 billion business.

“The big question is, is this a logical business plan?” said Gene Kimmelman, a former antitrust official in the Obama administra­tion and senior adviser to Public Knowledge, a nonprofit think tank in Washington. “For a social network with enormous growth in photos and messaging, there’s probably significan­t business justificat­ion for combining the units.”

But Rep. David Cicilline, DR.I., chairman of the House antitrust subcommitt­ee, said Facebook’s moves needed to be scrutinize­d.

“The combinatio­n of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp into the single largest communicat­ions platform in history is a clear attempt to evade effective antitrust enforcemen­t by making it harder for the company to be broken up,” he said. “We need to hit the pause button.”

Facebook has pushed back on the idea that the company’s moves — particular­ly in private messaging — are in anticipati­on of a potential breakup.

“Building more ways for people to communicat­e through our messaging apps has always been about creating benefits for people — plain and simple,” said Stan Chudnovsky, a vice president at Facebook overseeing messaging. “People want to be able to reach as many people as they can with the messaging app they choose.”

In Washington, Facebook has its eye particular­ly on the Federal Trade Commission, the agency that is now investigat­ing it for anticompet­itive practices, said two of the people with knowledge of the social network.

The FTC became interested in looking at Facebook and its power last year when the agency’s investigat­ors were separately examining the company for privacy violations, said two people close to the process. At the time, the FTC’s investigat­ors uncovered internal Facebook documents that prompted concerns around how the company was acquiring rivals, they said.

Facebook’s long string of acquisitio­ns — it bought Instagram in 2012 and WhatsApp in 2014, among many others — have been targeted by academics and policymake­rs for reducing competitio­n. They have argued that the company engaged in “serial defensive acquisitio­ns” to protect its dominant position in social networking.

This year, the FTC sought clearance from the Justice Department to open an antitrust investigat­ion into potentiall­y anticompet­itive behavior at Facebook, the people close to the process said. The FTC was cleared to do so, and notified Facebook in June. By late July, the agency had contacted at least a halfdozen founders of companies that Facebook had bought over the past 15 years for informatio­n on its acquisitio­n practices, said four people with knowledge of the outreach.

Around the time that the FTC activity on Facebook increased, the company also stepped back on at least one potential acquisitio­n.

In December, Facebook executives were in advanced discussion­s to buy Houseparty, a social networking app that lets multiple people video chat on their mobile phones at once, said two people with knowledge of the talks. Houseparty, founded in 2016 by Ben Rubin, was especially popular with audiences under the age of 24. Facebook, whose members are getting older, has coveted younger users.

But weeks into the discussion­s, Facebook’s corporate developmen­t team killed the talks with Houseparty, the people said. Houseparty’s executives were told that a deal would draw unwelcome federal government scrutiny to Facebook, they said. Houseparty was later purchased by Epic Games, the makers of “Fortnite.”

Facebook’s changes that appear to make a breakup of its apps more difficult began more than a year ago. Zuckerberg focused on combining the underlying infrastruc­ture of WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook Messenger. The project, called “interopera­bility,” requires years of deeply technical and difficult engineerin­g work.

The aim, in part, was to create less of a hodgepodge of companies and more of a unified network, said people briefed on the strategy. Publicly, Zuckerberg has said the initiative will help build a more “private” version of Facebook so customers can “communicat­e across networks easily and securely,” as users flock to messaging services en masse. People will also get a better and more streamline­d user experience, he has said. Zuckerberg has added that a unified messaging system would better lend itself to moneymakin­g efforts on WhatsApp, which today brings in little revenue.

But the idea of “interopera­bility” was a departure for Facebook. Though Facebook and Instagram have long shared much of the same infrastruc­ture, its different messaging products generally operated independen­tly.

Though employees at Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp are in separate physical buildings, executives have also pushed for them to share more internal resources and have reorganize­d their reporting lines. In one instance, Facebook executives ordered a change in the messaging teams, two of the people said, requiring the Instagram messenger division to report to the leaders at Facebook’s Messenger app. Bloomberg earlier reported on the internal reorganiza­tion.

Last year, Facebook also began a rebranding project, tapping at least one outside agency for help, said three people familiar with the initiative. The agency, Prophet Brand Strategy, was asked to make Facebook into a “branded house,” where Facebook’s moniker always preceded the names of WhatsApp and Instagram, they said. The mandate came from Zuckerberg and Antonio Lucio, Facebook’s chief marketing officer, they said.

In March, Jane Manchun Wong, an independen­t security researcher, spotted the new branding — “Instagram from Facebook” — in some unreleased lines of code.

Employees at both Instagram and WhatsApp, who have been accustomed to greater autonomy, have chafed at the coming changes, said three people familiar with the divisions.

In hindsight, Facebook had quietly signaled that unificatio­n was afoot more than a year ago. In June 2018, the company introduced a combined metric that drew attention away from any individual product. Later, Facebook said it planned to stop releasing individual user numbers for Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp in its quarterly financial reports.

The name of the new metric? Facebook’s Family of apps.

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 ?? John Locher / Associated Press ??
John Locher / Associated Press

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