Wednesday, March 21, 2018

WhatsApp co-founder: Time to #deletefacebook

by the way likely the most used APP on my Iphone has been "What's App" likely the last 3 to 5 years now. It is wonderful to contact both friends and relatives overseas especially, through text or internet phone calls through What's app. It is a way to text and communicate and to send pictures or short home videos overseas for free to many countries, especially to places like Europe or further East or places like South Korea or other countries around the world.

Will everyone delete Facebook now? That remains to be seenBegin quote from:WhatsApp co-founder: Time to #deletefacebook
The Mercury News 3h ago
RELATED COVERAGE
WhatsApp co-founder tells everyone to delete Facebook
Highly Cited The Verge 19h ago

BREAKING NEWS

 

WhatsApp co-founder: Time to #deletefacebook

FILE - This Feb. 19, 2014, file photo, shows WhatsApp and Facebook app icons on a smartphone in New York. The EU’s competition watchdog has fined Facebook 110 million euros ($122 million) for providing misleading information over its buyout of mobile messaging service WhatsApp. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File)
AP Photo/Patrick Sison/File
FILE – This Feb. 19, 2014, file photo, shows WhatsApp and Facebook app icons on a smartphone in New York. Brian Acton, co-founder of WhatsApp, said in a tweet that it is time for everyone to “#deletefacebook”. Facebook bought WhatsApp in @014 for $16 billion.
PUBLISHED:  | UPDATED: 
Call it a case of biting the hand that fed you. Call it a case of having so much money you can say whatever you want. Whatever the case may be, a former official with high-level ties to Facebook has come out and slammed what the social network has become.
But this time, the person is telling everyone just to dump Facebook entirely.
siliconbeat logo tech news blogBrian Acton, one of the two founders of WhatsApp, the company behind the popular messaging app of the same name, took to Twitter late Tuesday with a simple message: Delete Facebook.
ADVERTISING
In 2014, Acton, and WhatsApp’s other founder, Jan Koum, sold their company to Facebook for $16 billion. To put that figure in some perspective, Facebook paid “only” $1 billion for Instagram back in 2012. Koum is still running WhatsApp and remains a member of Facebook’s board of directors.
Why would Acton take a swipe against the company that made him a very rich man? Well, for starters, Acton no longer has a role with Facebook or What’sApp, so he might just have nothing to lose. He left the company earlier this year to start a foundation, and last month, Acton invested $50 million in a company called Signal, which purports to be a messaging alternative to WhatsApp.
Acton’s call to action came on the heels of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which the U.K.-based analytics firm allegedly misused the data of 50 million Facebook users starting in 2014. Cambridge Analytica provided analytic data to the presidential campaign of Donald Trump in 2016, but denies that any of the Facebook data was used in connection with Trump’s campaign. However, Cambridge Analytica is alleged to have planted fake news items in front of Facebook users throughout the 2016 presidential race.
The Cambridge Analytica matter is proving to be the biggest test Facebook and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg have ever faced. The situation has resulted in legislators calling upon Zuckerberg to appear before Congress and give details on how Facebook uses information about its users. Investors have also bailed on Facebook this week, sending the company’s share price down by 9.5 percent since Monday, to around $167.

No comments: