Summary
· Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Facebook-parent Meta, announced on Sunday the launch of Meta Verified, a service starting at $11.99 a month to authenticate one's account, which follows a similar move by Elon Musk at Twitter
San Francisco. Facebook, the social network that was supposed to stay
free "always," and its stablemate Instagram launched on Sunday a paid
subscription service, as the advertising-based business model that has long
dominated the internet falters.
Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of
Facebook-parent Meta, announced on Sunday the launch of Meta Verified, a
service starting at $11.99 a month to authenticate one's account, which follows
a similar move by Elon Musk at Twitter.
"This new feature is about
increasing authenticity and security across our services," Zuckerberg
wrote in a statement posted to Facebook and Instagram.
Meta Verified will be rolled out in
Australia and New Zealand this week before coming to markets in the United
States and other countries.
Subscribers will get a badge
indicating their account has been verified with a government ID, extra
protection against impersonation, direct access to customer support and more
visibility, according to the company.
The social media giant said the
service would be primarily aimed at content creators looking to expand their
presence on the platforms and could see adjustments after a test phase.
There would be no changes to
accounts on Facebook and Instagram that are already verified, the company said,
adding that only users who are over the age of 18 will be allowed to subscribe.
The service is not yet available to businesses.
It was not immediately clear how
Zuckerberg planned to price Meta Verified in countries where users cannot
afford to pay $12 a month, or in cash-based economies where they may have fewer
ways to get the money to Meta.
Musk's initial attempts to launch a
similar service at rival social media network Twitter last year backfired, with
an embarrassing spate of fake accounts that scared advertisers and cast doubt
on the site's future.
He was forced to briefly suspend the
effort before relaunching it to muted reception in December.
'Free'?
Facebook helped establish the
dominant model of large platforms on the internet today, which sees users benefit
from "free" services that collect their data to sell personalized ad
space.
It is a model that has earned the
company, along with other advertising titans such as Google, tens of billions
of dollars a year.
For years the Facebook homepage
proudly declared that the site was "free and always will be."
But in 2019 the company quietly
ditched the slogan. At the time experts suggested it was because the value of
users' personal data meant the site was never truly free.
In 2022, Meta saw its ad revenue
decline for the first time since the California-based group went public in
2012.
The company recently announced that
the number of Facebook's daily users hit two billion -- but between inflation
eating into advertisers' budgets and fierce competition from apps such as
TikTok, those users are not bringing in as much revenue as they used to.
The company has also suffered from
regulatory changes introduced by iPhone maker Apple, which restrict the ability
of social networks to collect data and sell advertising.
Similar factors have already pushed
other networks, from Reddit to Snapchat as well as Twitter, to launch paid
plans.
Meta is also under pressure for
making a huge gamble on the metaverse, the world of virtual reality that
Zuckerberg believes will be the next frontier online.
'Not a small fee'
Investors last year punished Meta,
sending the company's share price down by an astonishing two-thirds over 12
months, but the stock has recovered some ground in 2023.
Meta announced in November it would
lay off 11,000 employees, or 13 percent of its staff -- the largest worker
reduction in the company's history.
Meta Verified will be cheaper on the
web than on mobile applications because of commissions taken by Apple on the
iPhone or Google on smartphones operated by its Android system.
Zuckerberg said it would cost $11.99
on the web, and $14.99 per month on iOS or Android.
The company said it doesn't expect
to make significant revenue from the service during the test phase but that it
is part of diversification efforts.
"Personally, I think it's more
about diversifying revenue," said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at
Creative Strategies.
After Twitter launched its
subscription, other social media groups thought "well, we might as well
try," she told AFP.
"Justifying that from a creator
perspective I think is more of a marketing pitch than of true value to
creators," she added.
Platforms are fighting for users and
that of influencers that draw their attention.
But for Milanesi, the Meta Verified
offers are "a weird mix."
"I don't know if it gives
enough to one category (of users) to justify the amount of money, which is not
a small fee."
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