What Facebook will look like in 2025 | Mashable.

4 scenarios for the future of Facebook

The social network could conquer the world by 2025 — or end up on the scrapheap of history.

Mark Zuckerberg is still on top of the world, but fortunes change fast. Credit: kENZO TRIBOUILLARD / AFP, MUSTAFA YALCIN / ANADOLU AGENCY, CHRISTOPHE MORIN / IP3, TOBIAS HASE/PICTURE ALLIANCE, VIA GETTY IMAGES

Mashable's series Tech in 2025 explores how the challenges of today will dramatically change the near future.


In 2020, Facebook is a greater force than ever.

As of June 30, a record 2.7 billion people — exactly a third of the population of Earth — enter the social network at least once a month. Some 1.8 billion of us, another record, use Facebook at least once a day. Just counting these devotees, Facebook has a population larger than the U.S. and China combined. Add the roughly 600 million who don't frequent Facebook but do visit one of its conquests (Instagram and WhatsApp) daily, and we're talking an empire the size of the U.S., China, Russia, and all of Europe.

If Facebook is an empire, Mark Zuckerberg is Dictator for Life. The founder's stock gives him control over 58 percent of all shareholder votes. His allies control a further 12 percent. Zuckerberg can't stop other shareholders tabling votes to curb his power, but he can win every vote at the click of a button. Let the likes of Snapchat or TikTok gain all the teen users they can muster; neither can affect his power any time soon. Even a major advertiser boycott sparked by Facebook's inability to clamp down on hate speech did not make a dent. Quarterly revenue, announced July 30, was up nearly 12 percent year-on-year.

So if he can achieve results like this in the midst of a pandemic, will anything stop Zuckerberg on the road to world domination? By 2025, is there anything that can prevent Facebook gobbling up ever larger shares of the planet's attention and the internet's advertising dollars?

In the following four scenarios for Facebook's future, there most definitely is. We saw it on display on July 29, when Zuckerberg was made to sweat before the U.S. Congress (not for long enough, but still). A majority of the House's antitrust committee is clearly primed for regulatory action, as are other governments around the world. Receipts have been brought. Zuckerberg has condemned himself by his own words. Even in business-friendly America, recent polls show a clear bipartisan majority of voters favor breaking up tech giants like Facebook by undoing their acquisitions.

How to see the future

You don't have to be a historian to know that fortune can be fickle. The future often hides surprises, especially from leaders with a lot of hubris. Scenario planning has been used to uncover potential surprises ever since it helped Shell Oil prepare for the energy crisis of the 1970s ahead of time.

Here's how it works: You draw two intersecting lines representing things that matter to a company (in Facebook's case, let's go with "popularity" and "government regulation"). One end of the line is "more," the other is "less." Like so:

Mashable Image
Credit: Chris Taylor / Mashable

That gives us four squares, corresponding to four very different futures. What's down the road for Facebook in each one? Let the informed speculation begin!

1. A temporary breakup

More regulation, more popularity

Democrats regain the presidency and the Senate in 2021; they are keen to take action against a CEO who boosted conservative voices and repeatedly refused to refute Trump's lies. Sen. Elizabeth Warren's plan to break up big tech becomes a legislative priority for the new majority, with Facebook's acquisitions seen as the lowest hanging fruit. The FTC and DOJ investigations into Facebook's monopoly power, begun under Donald Trump, gather steam under new President Joe Biden.

Zuckerberg reads the writing on the wall. Forestalling the kind of antitrust courtroom drama that led to the break up of Standard Oil and AT&T, he negotiates a consent decree. This forces him to spin off Instagram and WhatsApp as separate companies, incidentally allowing each firm to reunite with its disgruntled founders.

It's a financial windfall for Facebook, which reaps multiples on the $20 billion it paid for the two companies a decade earlier. But more importantly, it's a PR coup. Millions of people who feared Facebook's power are now convinced that Zuckerberg has now learned his lesson. Opinion writers turn to the potential for government overreach. The GOP gains the House in the 2022 midterm elections, in part by stoking fears that "Biden's PC police" is now going to tell you what you can and can't write on Facebook — a message subtly amplified by Zuckerberg's algorithm.

With Washington gridlocked again, Facebook is free to resume acquisitions. Presuming TikTok isn't available, Zuckerberg goes after the next wave of hot Chinese startups. He can sell this as a series of patriotic purchases that help make sure American teens are using American products.

The chatter that Zuckerberg could run for president himself picks up where it left off in 2017 — only this time, he's rumored to be a contender on the GOP side. He doesn't throw his hat into the ring in 2024, but in 2028, who knows?

Whether or not Zuckerberg runs, Facebook has at least learned to stay sweet with both sides in Congress. Zuckerberg's wealth spreads around in massive super PAC donations. Years later, Facebook reacquires Instagram and WhatsApp in government-approved deals. Commentators note that the same thing happened with AT&T: After being broken up in 1984, Ma Bell reconstituted herself and came back more powerful than ever. Future historians debate whether this was Zuckerberg's plan for Facebook all along.

WATCH; The rise of Big Tech monopolies from Microsoft to Google



0 seconds of 6 minutes, 4 secondsVolume 0%
00:13
06:04

2. Decline and Fall

More regulation, less popularity

Government oversight doesn't stop at antitrust. In a move watched closely around the world, Australia follows through on its July 2020 threat to make Facebook and Google pay media organizations for any journalism they host on their platforms. The EU follows suit, extracting the maximum penalty from Facebook in its pending GDPR fine; some of the multibillion-Euro proceeds are donated to media entities hit hard by the coronavirus.

A wave of Biden-style post-populist governments around the world realize that a strong media is the best defense against both Facebook's predatory practices and the lies that spread on its platforms. So the Fourth Estate is flush again, and it does not forget how Facebook brought it to the brink of destruction. Neither do the disgruntled engineers that quit Zuckerberg's company over his approach to Trump, and brought receipts.

Millions of journalists were laid off in the great "pivot to video" scandal of the late 2010s, where Zuckerberg inflated viewership and offered subsidies for video content from companies that could ill afford to produce it. They return to newsrooms now, many of them vowing to spend their days investigating any Facebook outrage they can find. Eventually, just in time for the presidential election of 2024, a new Facebook manipulation scandal is uncovered — one that makes Cambridge Analytica look like a storm in a teacup.

The candidate who vows to clip Facebook's wings even further wins the election. Meanwhile, nudged on by the media, a "Boycott Facebook" group takes to the streets around the world — led by Generation Z, which long ago abandoned the old-school social network for Twitter, TikTok, Snapchat and the newly independent Instagram. They lean on advertisers to do the same; this time, the boycott works.

Facebook is not killed off entirely; the popularity of Messenger alone should keep it running for decades. But it fails to get traction in the race for the next big consumer platforms, such as AR glasses. Once its monthly active users dip below the one billion mark, it has become officially uncool and the trend seems irreversible. Zuckerberg washes his hands of the company, stepping down as CEO and selling enough shares to make its managed decline the problem of a flailing board of directors, while he moves on to his next big thing.

Eventually Facebook finds its niche in the developing world, just as Friendster did after it was knocked off its perch as the most popular U.S. social network. Outside one or two countries it is little remembered; there are plenty of newer, scarier social media giants to occupy our attention.

3. Facebook is the Devil

Less regulation, less popularity

As in 2016, a Democratic candidate wins the popular vote in 2020 — but after a close and chaotic election with many foreign interference campaigns on social media, the electoral college is deadlocked, and the House's majority of GOP delegations gives the edge to Trump. A sharply divided populace explodes in fury, inching ever closer to civil war. Many demons are unleashed in a second Trump term, not least of them the darker side of Facebook.

Sheryl Sandberg resigns, in sympathy with dozens of the company's best engineers who fear that they have unleashed a monster. Authoritarianism is ascendant around the world, and the evidence points to Facebook manipulation as a major factor. Rather than denying it, increasingly, Zuckerberg leans in. He curries favor with populist leaders clinging to power everywhere, disgusting millions who rage-quit the service. Zuckerberg, still the ultimate honey badger, doesn't care.

In Sandberg's absence, Zuckerberg gets more of his advice from conservative and vindictive Facebook board member Peter Thiel. Now Trump doesn't even have to dangle the threat of government regulation. Zuckerberg has effectively been redpilled. Tucker Carlson's Daily Caller continues its dubious "fact-checking" of liberal opinions. Commentators complain that this is censorship by another name. Their articles are not often spotted by the Facebook algorithm. As was often true in 2020, the most popular stories on the service are always from right-leaning sites.

Facebook's user base declines as Democrats desert the echo chamber. Advertising boycotts begin to bite. The stock starts to tumble. Still Zuckerberg won't give up his iron grip on those voting shares. To make up for lost ad revenue, he milks his MAGA user base. Trump's regulators, at the very least, look the other way.

The indignity could be worth it to Facebook in the long run if its association with Trump make its bitcoin alternative Libra look like a government-sanctioned cryptocurrency. There's also the hope that Trump abandons the "very unfair" Twitter, vowing to make all his pronouncements from Facebook from now on. He could also announce support for a potential cryptocurrency venture after his own heart: Facebook Casino.

4. Facebook is God

Less regulation, more popularity

Using the results of the 2020 election to prove it can coexist with a democratic society after all, Facebook embarks on a major charm offensive. Step one: Sheryl Sandberg becomes CEO, vowing to make a fresh start, even though Zuckerberg retains his voting share and is still rumored to pull strings behind the scenes.

There's one exception to Sandberg's time in the limelight. In a lengthy televised mea culpa, Priscilla standing by his side, Zuckerberg reveals how Trump threatened him with investigations during their secret dinner in 2019. This becomes one of the largest of many post-presidency Trump scandals. As a result, regulation of social media is seen as a Trumpian tactic. Biden has positioned himself as a president who will do the literal opposite of his predecessor in everything.

So antitrust regulation dies on the vine, especially after Sandberg pledges that WhatsApp and Instagram will be run as independent entities for the next decade. Meanwhile, Facebook keeps the media sweet by unilaterally offering small payments for each time a user clicks on a story. It isn't as much as media entities would get if the Australia rule had been more than a threat, but it's enough to keep them afloat. Facebook is to journalists what Spotify is to musicians: Stingy yet indispensable.

This new broom atmosphere allows Facebook's purchase of TikTok to sail past regulators. Sandberg plays up the patriotic angle and the safety angle. New Facebook privacy tools are introduced to great fanfare. More and more users choose to opt out of targeted advertising. Facebook takes the hit because it's playing the long game: If it's trusted by everyone, the advertisers will come.

By 2025, Facebook celebrates its six billionth monthly active user. It has integrated itself into every aspect of our daily lives, from its popular bitcoin alternative Libra to Oculus' AR glasses to Facebook's vast entertainment division. The company soon has enough cash on hand for a takeover of AT&T's media empire, positioning itself as a strong bulwark against the power of Disney.

Like Disney, however, Facebook has learned how to look benign and happy on the surface while it sucks dollars from our wallets. When a new app garners the interest of teens, it's just a given that Facebook will buy it, but at least we don't have to worry that it will sell quite so much of our data. We recognize Facebook is unassailable. We just stop minding.

More in Politics


Comments

  1. It's a well established fact that the app is being used to track people's personal info by the government and worse yet target young people to influence their perception of society so needless to say it needs to go because a monster that literally tracks your every move personal beliefs and thoughts without oversight will eventually become a way to control our lives completely.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. https://media1.tenor.co/images/49b05df86a7f99a094c25a6520630c0d/tenor.gif?c=VjFfZmFjZWJvb2tfd2ViY29tbWVudHM&itemid=4971614

      Delete
    2. Z is just a front man. The info gets split between law enforcement and defense. Law enforcement use the info to arrest people they don't like defense uses the info the create defense contingency war plans. When they're deciding who to bomb they're using our emails and text messages and posts to do it.

      Delete
    3. IF YOUR ON TIC TOK, CHINA NOW HAS ALL YOUR PERSONAL INFORMAION ALREADY

      Delete
    4. https://media1.tenor.co/images/617fe0489f74f119736e270cbfad2b52/tenor.gif?c=VjFfZmFjZWJvb2tfd2ViY29tbWVudHM&itemid=5548885

      Delete
    5. I'm not on tic tok so I'm gtg.

      Delete
  2. I'm on the side of collapse. It's infected our existence and not in a positive way. Its a glorified app that is controlling people's lives. Shut it down. All things come to an end.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. says the person using Facebook comment section to gripe.

      Delete
    2. Tell that to mashable. How can you tell she is griping? Lol

      Delete
    3. says the person using Facebook to reply with an assumption about a complete stranger. 🙄

      Delete
    4. I hope you won't misunderstand this because a lot of people don't give strangers a friendship hand. Forgive me if I have just intruded on your privacy. But I hope you understand that I am just trying to be a friend. I sent you a friend request but it was canceled if you also send me a message on messenger. I kindly ask that you add me as your Facebook friend for better communication and friendship🌹🌹

      Delete
    5. what's the assumption. The proof is her comment.

      Delete
  3. Tell you what Zuckerberg, 1 stop taxing us on items we were already taxed on, the items people sell on marketplace, yea they paid taxes when they bought it. 2. Facebook needs to figure out who it is, right, left, unbiased, whichever, stop flopping around with the fad of the week. 3. You make a lot of money off the people, make sure you’re company is paying taxes. 4. Give back, pay people for their content and intellectual property, you make all your money off the backs of the users, it’s only right you give them opportunity. It’s pretty simple math buddy, do good things and good things will happen, or you can listen to your rich friends and government and sink yourself. It’s your choice! Good luck to ya.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm all for the scrapheap, even tho I'm on here as I type

    ReplyDelete
  5. I’m really hoping no for the scrap heap of history.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Maybe it'll be like the defunct Friendster.com.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mark Zuckerberg please resign brother

    ReplyDelete
  8. It seems a Tesla short wouldn’t be a safer bet.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Just fade away,imperceptibly …et voilà .gone!

    ReplyDelete
  10. https://media1.tenor.co/images/098cdbc27b52bc0b6c110bb5c01142f6/tenor.gif?c=VjFfZmFjZWJvb2tfd2ViY29tbWVudHM&itemid=25515456

    ReplyDelete
  11. in time these men will fail. history has not kind to those who only know how to take and take and take and take.

    ReplyDelete
  12. May it go away like the dodo

    ReplyDelete
  13. Scrapheap i predict with other kinder less bossy and stroppy media taking its place.

    ReplyDelete
  14. The need to stop erasing comments.

    ReplyDelete
  15. There is no way they can conquer the world every time they purchase a company regulator’s step in. Amazon on the other hand keeps gobbling up companies imho if allowed think they can be the conquerors

    ReplyDelete
  16. Facebook could design a form of crypto currency which is weird that didn't

    ReplyDelete
  17. When he goes for a haircut does he ask for the Zuckerberg?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. you would think as rich as he is that he could do better than getting that dorky cut!

      Delete
  18. The sooner it disappears the better

    ReplyDelete
  19. scrapheap sounds good

    ReplyDelete
  20. i prefer yahoochat to this setup.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Scrap heap, please.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Too bad I can't send a friend request LOL Hi from Texas, it will be awesome if you can send me a friend request.
      I mean no offense just want to be friend.

      Delete
  22. THe four brothers who own Facebook? Facebook must be owned by the users. Not by crazy billionaires. Maybe we can buy Facebook if all users contribute a little?

    ReplyDelete
  23. People are waking up. Scrapheap.

    ReplyDelete
  24. will be replaced by TikTokBook

    ReplyDelete
  25. I posted an article about the origins of the "Green New Deal" ...Facewoke blocked it ....Why? It wouldn't bother me if it ended up on the Dung pile of history.

    ReplyDelete
  26. I think mostly because they favor what the government and most of America does new trends outside or the radar they fear dont eally want or get involved with

    ReplyDelete
  27. https://youtube.com/watch?v=cSp1dM2Vj48

    ReplyDelete
  28. Sort it mark or in the bin....

    ReplyDelete
  29. i just love allk your comments 🤝🏿💪🏿SCRAPEHEAP LET ANOTHER NEW APP EMERGE !!!time for this app to go...it's been far to weaponized and it's outta control no worries AI will destroy its maker..so we have perfect justice in the end!!!! now let's say tic tok mf🤣🤣

    ReplyDelete
  30. Time to that lefty zuckerverg to step off for the good of facebook

    ReplyDelete
  31. #Facebook & Shittiest #billionaire #CEO #Meta #MarkZuckberg!

    ReplyDelete
  32. All CIA supported ops

    ReplyDelete
  33. WTF is a Facebook?

    ReplyDelete
  34. 與魔鬼交易,只能下地獄

    https://imgur.com/a/Xl7mtDP

    ReplyDelete
  35. Here’s hoping it’s the latter! I hate Facebook!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 非常認同

      https://imgur.com/a/GWxIlI9

      Delete
  36. If there is any justice in this world, Zucky will completely crash!

    ReplyDelete
  37. This jerk-off Zucky will crash and burn eventually. He stole the Idea for Facebook and had to pay the Winklevoss Twins $70, 000,000 for doing it. He has never done anything he did not steal, like everyone's information, and used it illegally to make tens of billions off "OUR" information. Then lied under oath to congress every time he was called there.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Stay informed!