seu 2 days ago

These changes in direction (spending billions, freezing hiring) over just a few months show that these people are as clueless as to what's going to happen with AI, as everyone else. They just have the billions and therefore dictate where money goes, but that's it.

  • mlsu 2 days ago

    This is a structural problem with our economy, much larger than just Facebook. Due its large scale concentration, the allocation of capital in the economy as a whole has become far less efficient over the last 20 years.

    • RugnirViking 2 days ago

      But always remember, it's not technically a monopoly!

      Boy am I tired of that one. We desperately need more smaller companies and actual competition but nobody seems to even be trying

      • todd-davies a day ago

        Many of us in the antitrust/competition law community are trying. One issue, specific to digital markets, is that the field has very few people who are both legally and technically literate. If you're a technical person looking for a career shift, moving into legal policy/academia has the potential to be quite high impact for that reason.

      • SR2Z a day ago

        The allocation of capital is not even close to a monopoly. There are plenty of VC firms looking to fund almost any idea.

        The point of VC, specifically, is to grow software monopolies - but it's very easy to pick up VC funding if you happen to live in the Bay Area.

      • ajuc 13 hours ago

        World would benefit greatly if EU went ahead with tech tax. It's crazy how much IT companies get away with that would be the end of any other business.

        • specialist 3 hours ago

          Yes and: As a more palatable form of carbon tax?

          Yes, mosedef, I'm all in.

          Please post/share any news or tips you find. TIA.

  • awalsh128 2 days ago

    This is why I ignore anything that CEOs say about AI in the news. Examples, AGI in a few years, most jobs will be obsolete, etc.

    • turzmo a day ago

      CEO's were never credible to begin with, but what about Nobel laureate in Physics, Geoffrey Hinton, telling us to stop training radiologists? Nothing makes sense anymore.

      • thfuran a day ago

        Well, clearly he should stick to physics. Even if it's likely that AI would replace them soon, a lot of people would likely die unnecessarily if we ran overly low on radiologists by ending the pipeline too soon. They're already overworked and that can only go so far. It's not a bet we should make.

        • dismalaf a day ago

          > Well, clearly he should stick to physics.

          While his Nobel prize was for "physics", his domain is AI.

      • dismalaf a day ago

        Geoffrey Hinton believes a little too much in his baby.

    • specialist 3 hours ago

      Author Ted Chiang is the only celebrity AI kibitzer pundit I wholly agree with.

      Paraphrasing: Capital will use / is using AI to further bludgeon Labor.

  • toephu2 2 days ago

    The media always says AI is the biggest technological change of our lifetime.. I think it was the internet actually.

    • postalrat 2 days ago

      I believe it's the biggest change since the Internet but what will be bigger will probably remain subjective.

      • platevoltage 2 days ago

        I’d say that the social media revolution had a bigger effect than AI has at this point.

    • ath3nd 2 days ago

      The media was saying nfts are a reasonable investment and web3 is the future, so I am not sure if they have any remaining credibility.

      We are at the awesome moment in history when the AI bubble is popping so I am looking forward to a lot of journalists eating their words (not that anybody is keeping track but they are wrong most of the time) and a lot of LLM companies going under and the domino crash of the stocks of Meta, OpenAI to AWS, Google and Microsoft to Softbank (the same guys giving money to Adam Neumann from WeWork).

      • Gravey a day ago

        Can I ask why you would be looking forward to the stock market crashing? Vindication?

  • thefourthchime 2 days ago

    That's one interpretation, but nobody really knows. It's also possible that they got a bunch of big egos in a room and decided they didn't need any more until they figured out how to organize things.

  • jiveturkey 2 days ago

    you think folks that have experience managing this much money/resources (unlike yourself) are clueless? more likely it's 4D chess.

    • jamwil 2 days ago

      Just like the metaverse?

      • goyagoji 2 days ago

        Anti-aging startups is 5D chess, the 4th dimension is the most fickle so it's very hard to make it to a 4D intercept when your ideas are stupid.

    • dizlexic a day ago

      I think the use of "4d chess" was your downfall.

      I do however think that this is a business choice that at the very least was likely extensively discussed.

    • specialist 3 hours ago

      Zuck is fantastic at transferring wealth. Not so great at creating wealth.

    • [removed] 2 days ago
      [deleted]
    • AngryData 2 days ago

      Yes, yes I do. How much practical experience does someone with billions of dollars have with the average person, the average employee, the average job, and the kind of skills and desires that normal people possess? How much does today's society and culture and technology resemble society even just 15 years ago? Being a billionaire allows them to put themselves into their own social and cultural bubble surrounded by sycophants.

Hilift 2 days ago

META has only made $78.7 billion operating income in the past 12 months of returns. Time to buckle up!

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/META/financials/

  • ipnon 2 days ago

    It's really difficult to wrap one's head around the cash they're able to deploy.

    • kgwgk 2 days ago

      They “deploy” much more than what they generate.

      Their cash position has gone from $44bn to $12bn in the first six months of the year and are now getting other people to pay for datacenters https://www.reuters.com/business/meta-taps-pimco-blue-owl-29...

      • ipnon 2 days ago

        I take offense to your implication this is an incorrect usage of the word deploy.

      • selimthegrim 2 days ago

        I really hope they told the Louisiana regulators this in the meeting yesterday because the argument was something along the lines of “Meta is worth $2T”

      • oblio 2 days ago

        Ouch. Other FAANG in a similar position?

    • Hilift a day ago

      At the current price of $107,586 per kilo of gold, that is 731,507 kilos of gold per year. A rail box car has a load limit of 92,500 kilos. Eight full box cars, or 16 half full box cars of gold currently represents the annual output of META.

  • hinkley 2 days ago

    23:1 P/E. Not Tesla levels of stupidity but still high for a mature company.

  • almostgotcaught 2 days ago

    385 comments based on a clickbait headline from telegraph (you know that sophisticated tech focused newspaper...)

  • stripe_away 2 days ago

    how does this compare to the depreciation cost of their datacenters?

    • dh2022 2 days ago

      The financials from the link to not specifically call out Depreciation Expense. But Operating Income should take into account Depreciation Expense.

      The financials have a line below Net Income Line called "Reconciled depreciation" with about $16.7 billion. I do not know what that means (maybe this is how they get to the EBITDA metric) but maybe this is the metric you are looking for.

danpalmer 2 days ago

Zuckerberg either doesn't have the resolve for changing the business, or just keeps picking the wrong directions (depending on your biases).

First Facebook tried to pivot into mobile, pushed really hard for a short time and then flopped. Then Facebook tried really hard to make the Metaverse a thing, and for a while, but eventually Meta stopped finding it interesting and significantly reduced investment. Then AI was the big thing and Meta put a huge amount of money into it, chasing after other companies, with an arguably novel approach compared to the rest of big tech... but now seems to be backing out or at least messaging less commitment. Oh and I think there was some crypto in there too at one point?

I'm not saying that they should have stuck with any of these. The business may not have worked in each case, and that's fine, but spending billions on each one seems like a bad idea. Zuckerberg is great at chasing the next big thing, but seemingly bad at landing the next big thing. He either needs to chase them more tentatively, investing far less, or he needs to stick with them long enough to work out all the issues and build the growth over the long term.

  • xuki 2 days ago

    For the past 15 years, mobile has been the main revenue source for Facebook. As big as Facebook is, they're at the mercy of the 2 competitors: Apple and Google. Apple has been very hostile to Facebook, because Facebook make a shitload of money off Apple's platform and they refused to pay a certain percentage to Apple - unlike Google who is paying 20B a year to access iOS users. Apple tried to cut Facebook off with ATT on iOS 14, but it didn't work.

    Because of this, Zuckerberg has to be incredibly paranoid about controlling his company destiny, to stop relying on others' platforms to deliver ads. It would be catastrophic for Facebook to not be a main player for the next computing platform, and they're currently making a lot of money from their other businesses. Zuckerberg is ruthless and he is paranoid, he has total control of Facebook and he will use all the resources to control the next big thing. I think it comes down to this: Zuckerberg believes it's cheaper to be wrong than to miss out on the next platform, and Facebook can afford to be wrong (to a certain extend).

    • danpalmer 2 days ago

      > For the past 15 years, mobile has been the main revenue source for Facebook. As big as Facebook is, they're at the mercy of the 2 competitors

      Before mobile was this big, Facebook tried their own platform and bottled it. This was during the period that the market was still diverse, with Windows phones, Blackberries, etc.

      They also tried to make mobile web a thing for a few years past when it was obvious that native apps were the way forward.

      • xuki 2 days ago

        Facebook certainly did not have the resources and experiences to make a mobile OS at that point. Microsoft tried and failed, there was no space for a 3rd mobile OS.

        > They also tried to make mobile web a thing for a few years past when it was obvious that native apps were the way forward.

        This was one of the first friction Facebook encountered with Apple. They wanted to make their own store in the Facebook app on iOS, but obviously Apple said no. Maybe doing Facebook app in HTML5 was a way to protest against the way Apple was moving things forward, but again it didn't work, their app was crap and they rewrote everything in native.

    • cma a day ago

      Meta Quest Store charges the same cut as Apple with stricter control in many ways.

  • DanHulton 2 days ago

    Don't forget gaming back in the day! Facebook games started taking off, then Facebook decided that the _only_ way you could get paid on the Facebook platform was with Facebook Credits, and to incentivize Facebook as the gaming platform of choice, Facebook would give out free Credits to players to spend on Facebook games. Of course, if your game was the one they chose to spend those Credits on, you wouldn't actually get paid, not with promotional credits, what, are you crazy?

    No, I'm not still bitter from that era, why do you ask?

  • foxylad 2 days ago

    Cory Doctorow has a compelling theory that the megatech companies have to appear to be startups, or else their share price reverts to normal multiples. Hence the continuous string of increasingly over-hyped "game-changing technologies" they all (not just Meta) keep rolling out.

    VR, blockchain and LLMs have their value, but it's a tiny fraction of the insane amounts of money being pumped into these bubbles. There will be tears before bedtime.

    • mrandish 2 days ago

      Indeed, for big valley tech companies it's crucial to have a new business developing in the wings which has plausible potential to be the "next big thing." They're desperate to keep their stock price from being evaluated solely on trailing twelve month revenue, so having a shiny, ephemeral hype-magnet to attract inflated growth expectations is essential.

      So far, it appears the psychology of investors allows the new thing to fail to deliver big revenue and be tacitly dropped - as long as there's a new new thing to replace it as the aspirational vehicle. Like any good mark in a con game, tech investors want to believe.

      • ncallaway 2 days ago

        > as long as there's a new new thing to replace it as the aspirational vehicle. Like any good mark in a con game, tech investors want to believe.

        Yea, but it seems like the new new thing needs to get progressively bigger with each cycle, which is why I think the shell game is almost over.

        They really can't overpromise much more than they did with the AI hype-cycle.

        It feels like a startup valuation in that having a down round is...not favored by investors; I feel like having a step-down in promises would also be problematic.

      • jeremyjh 2 days ago

        Or every investor just expects the other investors will fall for this, but the result is the same: number go up so buy more. It could be no one really falls for it at all.

        • Imustaskforhelp 2 days ago

          The economy could be doing really bad but the stock market can be doing good, they aren't direct correlation imo anymore.

          It can take a long time for the stock market to actually be corrected but I know one thing and that is, bottom it would be corrected some day and maybe they would call it the bursting of a bubble

    • unmole a day ago

      > Cory Doctorow has a compelling theory that the megatech companies have to appear to be startups, or else their share price reverts to normal multiples.

      Meta's P/E is about the same as S&P 500.

      • specialist 2 hours ago

        Nicely spotted.

        I regard Meta and Google as ad agencies.

        (I'm not smart enough to break out Amazon's and Apple's ad biz P/E separately.)

        My quick spot check says Meta's P/E is more than "legacy" ad agencies and (much) less than Google's.

        Just observations. I have no insights.

        My opinion, based solely on vibes, is the online ad biz (Meta and Google) is more fraudulent than not. If true, than both are grossly overvalued, in that castles in the sky sort of way.

    • danpalmer 2 days ago

      This may well be true, but my point is more that Facebook/Meta/Zuckerberg seem almost uniquely unable to turn the startups into great new businesses, when compared with the other big tech companies.

      Amazon added cloud and prime, Microsoft added cloud, xbox, 365, Google added Chrome, Android, cloud, Youtube, consumer subscriptions, workspace, etc. Netflix added streaming and their own content, Apple added mobile, wearables, subscriptions.

      Meta though, they've got an abandoned phone platform from years ago, a half-baked Metaverse that is being defunded, a small hardware business for the Quest, a pro VR headset that got defunded, a crypto business that got deprioritised, and an LLM that's expensive relative to open competitors and underperforms relative to closed competitors... which the tide appears to be turning on as the AI bubble reaches popping point.

      • dig1 a day ago

        > Facebook/Meta/Zuckerberg seem almost uniquely unable to turn the startups into great new businesses, when compared with the other big tech companies.

        Really? Instagram, WhatsApp... the two most used apps & services in the world?

        > Google added Chrome, Android, cloud, Youtube,

        It's arguable how GCP is profitable, but chrome/android/yt are money-losing businesses if you exclude ad revenues.

        • nolok a day ago

          They're money losing business if you exclude their revenue source? Thats a weird take, you could say the same thing facebook itself ...

  • andai 2 hours ago

    I think Meta's real talent is to make niche tech mainstream, and then as a result they get their ass kicked in that sector. They're getting pretty good at that.

  • olyjohn 2 days ago

    Maybe he can work on making Facebook not be such a piece of shit. I feel like he got his one lucky break and should just give up on trying to make more money. He already has billions. Is he proud of Facebook as a product? Because as a user it feels sluggish, buggy, inconsistent, and just full of low quality trash. I would be embarrassed if I was him.

    • materielle 2 days ago

      That really seems to be the defining characteristic of the 21st century elite: they’re shameless and proud of it.

      • lazide 17 hours ago

        Only 21st century? Have you read any history at all?

  • e2021 2 days ago

    Metaverse was a flop maybe, but meta makes something like $1 billion a week from its mobile apps, it'd be crazy to say that is not successful.

    The fact that it was so successful, and that zuck picked mobile to be the next big thing before many of his peers and against what managers in the company wanted to do is probably what has made him now overconfident that he can do it again

    • scq 2 days ago

      By "pivot into mobile" I suspect the other poster is referring to Facebook Home, an ill-fated Android skin and line of smartphones.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook_Home

      • conartist6 2 days ago

        No. Back when smartphones were still in the process of taking over the market, Zuck saw the adoption curve and realized that future ad revenue would be from phone scrollers.

        At the time most features were designed and implemented first for desktop and later ported to mobile. He issued an edict to all hands: design and build for mobile first. Not at some point in the future but for everything, starting immediately.

        Maybe this doesn't sound major, but for the company it was a turn on a dime, and the pivot was both well informed and highly successful in practice.

    • herbst a day ago

      Call me classic and old school. But I call a company succuessfull if it actually does make more money than it spends. Everything else is just driving dept and economy but no actual success

  • elphinstone 2 days ago

    >Then Facebook tried really hard to make the Metaverse a thing, and for a while, but eventually Meta stopped finding it interesting and significantly reduced investment.

    That's a charitable description of a massive bonfire of cash and credibility for an end product that looks worse than a 1990s MMORPG and has fewer active users than a small town sports arena.

    • RugnirViking 2 days ago

      Compared to other recent bubbles (crypto, nfts, and ai), its practically quaint and lovable by comparison. About the only person it hurt is mark Zuckerberg and the marketing grifters that tried to start companies around it.

  • standardUser 2 days ago

    > Then Facebook tried really hard to make the Metaverse a thing...

    An unforced error on the scale of HBO switching to MAX, except likely far more expensive. What is the Metaverse anyway?

    • Imustaskforhelp 2 days ago

      man hbo's name changes are just so funny. I just searched, 4 name changes are wild.

    • ath3nd 2 days ago

      It's the future!

      The same as Zuck's bet on VR (remember Oculus?).

      Similar to Zuck's promises of superintelligence.

      Just one of the many futures wherein Meta poured a lot of money and achieved nothing.

      I hope in their real future there is bankruptcy and ruin.

      • paool 2 days ago

        Short sighted. I wouldn't count VR out until the fidelity is good enough and cheap enough that everyone who has a smartphone can experience VR/AR.

        If it still doesn't take off, fair.

        But I bet the form factor will be glasses because now you can have a screen way bigger than a phone or monitor and the interface is way smarter (ai).

        It's just a matter of when everyone can afford one

        • ath3nd a day ago

          > Short sighted

          If we wait 20 years for VR to take off and it's not Meta who benefits then, it's them who are short sighted to have started so early on that bandwagon.

          Besides, waiting for something to materialize before being able to declare that it is stupid is a cop out. What, are we waiting for NFTs to become useful? They are stupid now. VR is stupid and unsuccessful now. I ain't waiting to be able to declare that Meta screwed up both in VR and in the Metaverse whatever the Metaverse is.

  • jmyeet 2 days ago

    It's important to analyze decisions within the context at the time, not the modern context.

    When Facebook went into gaming, it was about the time they went public and they were in search of revenue. At the time, FB games were huge. It was the era of Farmville. Some thought that FB and Zynga would be the new Intel and MIcrosoft. This was also long before mobile gaming was really big so gaming wasn't an unreasonable bet.

    Waht really killed FB Gaming was not having a mobile platform. They tried. But they failed. We could live in a very different world if FB partnered with Google (who had Android) but both saw each other as an existential threat.

    After this, Zuckerberg paid $1 billion for Instagram. This was a 100x decision, much like Google buying Youtube.

    But in the last 5-10 years the company has seemed directionless. FB itself has fallen out of favor. Tiktok came out of nowhere and has really eaten FB's lunch.

    The Metaverse was the biggest L. Tends of billions of dollars got thrown at this before any product market fit was found. VR has always been a solution looking for a problem. Companies have focused on how it can benefit them but consumers just don't want headsets strapped to their heads. It's never grown beyond a niche and never shown signs that it would.

    This was so disastrous that the company lost like 60%+ of its value and seemingly it's been abandoned now.

    Meta also dabbled with cryptocurrencies and NFTs. Also abandoned.

    Social media really seems to have settled into a means of following public figures. Individuals generally seem to interact with each other via group texts.

    Meta has a massive corpus of posts, comments, interactions, etc to train AI. But what does Meta do with AI? Can they build a moat? It's never been clear to me what the end goal is.

    • kjellsbells 2 days ago

      > Meta has a massive corpus of posts, comments, interactions, etc to train AI

      I question whether the corpus is of particularly high quality and therefore valuable source data to train on.

      On the one hand: 20+ years of posts. In hundreds of languages (very useful to counteract the extreme English-centricity of most AI today).

      On the other hand: 15+ years of those posts are clustered on a tiny number of topics, like politics and selling marketplace items. Not very useful unless you are building RagebaitAI I suppose. Reddit's data would seem to be far more valuable on that basis.

    • hajile 2 days ago

      > Social media really seems to have settled into a means of following public figures. Individuals generally seem to interact with each other via group texts.

      I wish Google circles were still a thing.

    • danpalmer 2 days ago

      You're right about Instagram, I did forget them. That was a huge get. Was that skill or luck though?

      • olyjohn 2 days ago

        Didn't they just buy it though? Then they proceeded to fuck it up just like they did to Facebook.

        • danpalmer 2 days ago

          Depends on your interpretation. Maybe? I think there's a fair case that Instagram wouldn't be what it is today if it wasn't bought by Facebook.

          You could also level a similar question at Google about YouTube. I believe YouTube is one of Google's great successes (bias: I work at Google), and that it wouldn't have become what it is now outside of Google, but I think it would be hypocritical of me to not accept the same about Instagram.

  • elAhmo a day ago

    He, as many other billionaires, confused luck for skill. Just because they were at the right time in the right place to launch something, doesn't mean their other ideas are solid or make sense.

    • herbst a day ago

      Wouldn't it have been sexually exploiting the initial idea would have just been just a closed Myspace clone with not much path to success.

      He never tried his secret sauce again. He never realized where his actual success was

  • chris_wot 2 days ago

    Oh, I'm sure one day he'll chase the next big thing, but like the proverbial dog who chases the car, what will he do once he catches it?