Debugger

Facebook’s Plan to Fuse Its Messaging Apps Is Not About Your Privacy

Just follow the money

Owen Williams
OneZero
Published in
5 min readApr 29, 2019

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Credit: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

OOur smartphones have officially made it a pain to talk to one another. Many of us spend our days hopping between messaging apps, from iMessage to WhatsApp to Facebook Messenger to Instagram and back again, carrying on fractured conversations with the same set of people across a number of platforms.

But many of those services are owned by a single company: Facebook. WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram collectively reach more than 2 billion people, making Facebook the owner of the world’s largest messaging platform — and a potential gold mine.

Facebook knows this, and sensing the opportunity to completely own modern messaging, reportedly plans to unify those messaging services into a single, connected platform. This would bring an obvious benefit to users — convenience — but I’m not convinced that merging these platforms is really about users’ needs at all. In all likelihood, this is about Facebook knowing more about its users, regardless of where they’re chatting, for the sake of its ad business.

Removing Walls

You could imagine Facebook’s products today as a series of silos. Instagram and WhatsApp have their own databases and identity layers

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Owen Williams
OneZero

Fascinated by how code and design is shaping the world. I write about the why behind tech news. Design Manager in Tech. https://twitter.com/ow