Current:Home > ContactFrom Twitter chaos to TikTok bans to the metaverse, social media had a rocky 2022 -ProsperityStream Academy
From Twitter chaos to TikTok bans to the metaverse, social media had a rocky 2022
View
Date:2025-04-11 18:53:03
2022 has been a rocky year for social media companies.
Facebook burned through billions of dollars trying to make the metaverse happen. Elon Musk bought Twitter for $44 billion and plunged the company into chaos, sending advertisers and some power users fleeing. Across Silicon Valley, tens of thousands of workers have been laid off as economic woes deflated tech's pandemic high.
It's not what many companies expected back in January when they were trying fresh starts.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg had renamed his company Meta to signal a new big bet on the metaverse, an immersive, virtual world he thinks is the future of the internet.
Twitter had a new CEO, after co-founder Jack Dorsey handed the reins to technology chief Parag Agrawal. The company was launching new features and working to boost users and revenue, in a departure from its longtime reputation as being slow to innovate.
But within months, the mood changed dramatically. Amid global economic turmoil, higher interest rates, and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the online advertising market cratered.
Facebook announced its first-ever declines in users and sales. The company has lost about two-thirds of its market value this year. Other ad-dependent companies like Twitter, Google and Snapchat also felt the squeeze.
Soon, companies across tech that had over-hired during the pandemic announced layoffs and budget cuts.
At Twitter, things were even more unstable. In April, Musk launched a surprise bid for the company — and then spent months in a grueling, expensive legal battle to get out of the deal.
After Musk gave in and took control in late October, he slashed the workforce by more than half, upended the site's long-time rules, amplified conspiracy theories, welcomed back banned accounts including former President Donald Trump, and released internal documents in what appeared to be an attempt to discredit the previous management.
Big brands balked at Musk's capricious decisions, with more than half of Twitter's top 100 advertisers halting spending.
Era of fragmentation
But it's not just economic and management upheaval that's shifting the foundation the social media giants have built their businesses on.
Social media is entering a new era of fragmentation.
"Users are using [social apps] differently. Advertisers are using them differently," said Katie Harbath, a former public policy director at Facebook. "People are going to different places to get their entertainment and advertisers are trying to figure out where those eyeballs are."
That shift is epitomized by TikTok, the addictively popular Chinese-owned short video app. While the previous generation of sites from MySpace and Friendster to Facebook and Snapchat were built around connecting with friends and people you know, TikTok is all about serving up the most engaging videos from anyone, anywhere.
TikTok's runaway success has companies including Facebook and Google scrambling to copy its features, introducing their own short video formats and pushing more recommendations of posts from people users don't know or follow.
"There's a shinier object in the social media space and it doesn't involve your friends and what your friends are up to," said Michael Sayman, an app developer who has worked at Facebook, Google and Twitter.
TikTok is under scrutiny over national security, because of its links to China. It has been banned from government-owned devices in several states and the federal government. But it's already changed the landscape.
The race to emulate TikTok is pushing the big social media apps to become more like TV networks, where a tiny fraction of creators make almost all the content, Sayman said.
"The moneymakers in social media and really the profit for these companies is not any more in the business of friends sharing," he said.
That's left many people looking for alternative ways to keep up with friends. Many are turning to messaging services like WhatsApp, Signal and Discord, others to more private apps like BeReal, where users post one unedited photo a day, that can't be liked or shared.
Disillusionment with the legacy social sites has also inspired a new crop of apps by and for conservatives, who feel their views are muzzled by Silicon Valley.
Now, that partisan fracturing extends to Twitter, where Musk is courting right-wing users and alienating advertisers, employees and regulators.
This fragmentation of the public conversation across many more platforms also has implications for how social media can be misused. It's making life more complicated, both for threat actors trying to spread propaganda and amplify polarization, and for the people trying to investigate those threat actors, whether they are journalists or researchers or the companies themselves.
These fundamental behavioral shifts suggest the next era of social media will be defined not by one mega company, but by connections and content scattered across many apps.
Back in social media's early days, companies like Facebook "thought that people have one identity, and that they want to share parts of themselves with everybody that's in their lives," Harbath said. "And it's actually turning out, that's not the case."
veryGood! (4491)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Man arrested at JFK Airport in plot to join ISIS in Syria
- NFL MVP odds: Ravens' Lamar Jackson, Derrick Henry among favorites before Week 10
- California governor calls special session to protect liberal policies from Trump presidency
- Trump's 'stop
- Mayor wins 2-week write-in campaign to succeed Kentucky lawmaker who died
- Joe Biden's granddaughter Naomi Biden announces Election Day pregnancy: 'We voted'
- Roland Quisenberry’s Investment Journey: From Market Prodigy to AI Pioneer
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- SEC clashes Georgia-Ole Miss, Alabama-LSU lead college football Week 11 expert predictions
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- A Texas border county backed Democrats for generations. Trump won it decisively
- Get $147 Worth of Salon-Quality Hair Products for $50: Moroccanoil, Oribe, Unite, Olaplex & More
- Hope is not a plan. Florida decides to keep football coach Billy Napier despite poor results
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- AI ProfitPulse, Ushering in a New Era of Blockchain and AI
- Democrat Laura Gillen wins US House seat on Long Island, unseating GOP incumbent
- Text of the policy statement the Federal Reserve released Thursday
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Lock in a mortgage rate after the Fed cuts? This might be your last chance
Jimmy Kimmel fights back tears discussing Trump's election win: 'It was a terrible night'
She was found dead by hikers in 1994. Her suspected killer was identified 30 years later.
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Roland Quisenberry: A Token-Driven Era for Fintech
Every Time Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande Channeled Their Wicked Characters in Real Life
From Innovation to Ascendancy: Roland Quisenberry and WH Alliance Propel the Future of Finance