Meta’s Metaverse Division Reports 3rd Quarter Loss of Over $3.7B

Meta’s Facebook Reality Labs (FRL) division has reported a third-quarter loss of over $3.7 billion, making only $285 million, according to its earnings report released on Wednesday.

shutterstock_2090147881 e.jpg

The FRL is responsible for the research and development of Meta’s augmented and virtual reality as well as metaverse operations.

The $285 million revenue for the quarter was a downgrade from the $558 million that they made last year.

The loss has been a follow-up of other previous losses going back quarter after quarter. So far this year, the FRl has seen losses of $9.4 billion, compared to $6.9 billion in the same period last year.

“Our community continues to grow, and I’m pleased with the strong engagement we’re seeing driven by progress on our discovery engine and products like Reels,” said Mark Zuckerberg, Meta founder and CEO. “While we face near-term challenges on revenue, the fundamentals are there for a return to stronger revenue growth. We’re approaching 2023 with a focus on prioritization and efficiency that will help us navigate the current environment and emerge an even stronger company.”

Meta shares fell over 15% in after-hours trading Wednesday. Shares are down more than 60% this year.

The company’s flagship metaverse platform Horizon Worlds is also struggling to gain users and falling short of internal performance expectations, according to a recent report from the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

Meta’s initial goal was to reach 500,000 monthly active users for Horizon Worlds by the end of 2022. However, the company has readjusted that number to 280,000 in recent weeks. According to the WSJ, internal documents show that the current tally is less than 200,000.

User behaviour has shown that visitors to Horizon Worlds stop visiting the app after the first month, according to the documents seen by the WSJ, and the user base has gradually declined since March 2022.

Horizon is designed to be a sprawling collection of interactive virtual spaces, or worlds, in which users appearing as avatars can shop, party and work.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / / /

Meta Introduces Digital Collectibles NFT Features on Instagram & Facebook

On September 29, Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, announced that users on Facebook and Instagram in the US can now connect their wallets and share their digital collectables.

The company said that users of both platforms will be able to cross-post digital collectables they own and connect their associated wallets on Facebook and Instagram.

Additionally, there are no fees for posting or sharing digital collectables on Instagram, and it supports users in 100 countries to share non-fungible tokens.

The Meta platform also revealed in August that it had increased the number of compatible blockchain networks, including Flow from Dapper Labs. Based on this, investors can now upload their non-fungible tokens (NFTs) from Ethereum, Polygon, and Flow, respectively.

The company also plans to make its non-ft features on Instagram seamlessly accessible globally and has added support for Coinbase and Dapper wallets to complement its earlier integrations with Rainbow, MetaMask, and Trust wallets.

In May, Instagram announced a trial run of NFTs in the US to select creators.

In addition to Instagram, a non-NFT test on Facebook is also in developing, with the NFT feature being rolled out to some US creators in early July this year.

Since NFTs help build authentic intellectual property, this is one of the key drivers expected to push the sector to a $97.6 billion valuation by 2028, according to a report by Research and Markets.

Besides Meta, other social media platforms, including Twitter and Reddit, are also taking their NFT drives to new heights.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / /

Meta Introduces Cross-posting Digital Collectibles Feature on Instagram & Facebook

On September 29, Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, announced that users on Facebook and Instagram in the US can now connect their wallets and share their digital collectables.

The company said that users of both platforms will be able to cross-post digital collectables they own and connect their associated wallets on Facebook and Instagram.

Additionally, there are no fees for posting or sharing digital collectables on Instagram, and it supports users in 100 countries to share non-fungible tokens.

The Meta platform also revealed in August that it had increased the number of compatible blockchain networks, including Flow from Dapper Labs. Based on this, investors can now upload their non-fungible tokens (NFTs) from Ethereum, Polygon, and Flow, respectively.

The company also plans to make its non-ft features on Instagram seamlessly accessible globally and has added support for Coinbase and Dapper wallets to complement its earlier integrations with Rainbow, MetaMask, and Trust wallets.

In May, Instagram announced a trial run of NFTs in the US to select creators.

In addition to Instagram, a non-NFT test on Facebook is also in developing, with the NFT feature being rolled out to some US creators in early July this year.

Since NFTs help build authentic intellectual property, this is one of the key drivers expected to push the sector to a $97.6 billion valuation by 2028, according to a report by Research and Markets.

Besides Meta, other social media platforms, including Twitter and Reddit, are also taking their NFT drives to new heights.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / /

Meta Platform’s CEO Gets Probed by Senators on Crime Combating Measures on its Apps

The data received from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has shown a high increment of crypto scams on social media.

FB2.jpg

To this effect, a group of U.S Senators wrote a letter to Meta Platform’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg on Thursday to inquire about strategies he is putting in place to mitigate the rise in fraud as a result of cryptocurrency use through the firm’s platforms such as Whatsapp, Facebook, and Instagram.

According to reports gotten by FTC, between January and March, most crypto scams originated from social media platforms and have cost consumers a total of $417 million. This fraud comes in various forms ranging from users being asked to invest in investment schemes where they are promised high returns to ‘’ lovers fraud’’ where users are promised love with the sole intent of defrauding them.

Detailed information has been requested from Zuckerberg on how future fraud occurrence through the use of cryptocurrency will be prevented. The pertinent questions raised include strategies put in place to find and kick out scammers, methods to verify that crypto ads are not scams, policies to help the victims of fraud, and how Meta collaborates with law enforcement agents to make sure that scammers are brought to book.

Meta’s Efforts to Combat Crime

Meta had previously mentioned that there is a high propensity for crypto scammers to use its platforms to perpetrate crime. In reality, Facebook outlawed cryptocurrency advertisements in January 2018 because “many organizations are advertising binary options, ICOs, and cryptocurrencies that are not operating in good faith.”

Facebook announced in 2020 that it will take legal action against a Bangkok-based Indian man, Basant Gajjar over an alleged crypto crime because he created and sold software that enables malicious actors to get around Facebook’s automatic advertising review systems and show consumers unapproved adverts.

In 2020, Facebook users also claimed that there was a ban on Bitcoin-related content. Facebook posts that had pictures, text, and videos with Bitcoin tags were restricted from the public’s view.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / / /

Meta Users Can Now Post Digital Collectables on Instagram and Facebook

Meta Platforms Inc has announced that it has enabled the digital collectables features across its two major social media apps – Instagram and Facebook.

FBM2.jpg

The new feature will allow users the capability to post digital collectables.

As one of the social media platforms with a vested interest in the Non-Fungible Token (NFT) ecosystem and the broader Web3.0, Meta has already launched capabilities for digital collectables on Instagram as reported earlier by Blockchain.News. The recent update has now extended the capabilities to Facebook and its 2.9 billion active users will be able to benefit from the allowance.

“As we continue rolling out digital collectables on Facebook and Instagram, we’ve started giving people the ability to post digital collectables that they own across both Facebook and Instagram. This will enable people to connect their digital wallets once to either app in order to share their digital collectables across both,” Meta Platforms said in a Blog post first published on May 10 but updated to fit the Facebook permission.

 

The integration of NFTs into Meta’s systems has been a very gradual ride. The shared NFTs can be verified and users can add the description of the collection and the team behind the project to bolster its authenticity claims.

 

While the Instagram version was rolled out to feature just a handful of selected testers, the firm rolled out public access to the feature earlier this month. As announced, NFTs that are hosted on the Ethereum, Polygon, and Flow blockchains are currently accepted, and the company said it plans to add more chains in the near future.

 

The NFT or digital collectables pursuit of Meta Platforms is just one of the first moves into a metaverse-driven world that the company is envisioning. In a few years, it hopes the metaverse will be the next frontier of social interactions, and it is positioning itself to be a major player in the Wbe3.0 ecosystem that will be ushered in.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / / /

Facebook’s Metaverse “Will Misfire”, Says Vitalik Buterin

Vitalik Buterin, the co-founder of the Ethereum blockchain platform, raised some doubts Sunday concerning efforts by existing corporations to create metaverse. According to Buterin, any corporations trying to develop the Metaverse nowadays will fail.

Vitalik Buterin_1200.jpg

Although the Ethereum co-creator admitted that the Metaverse “is going to happen,” he thinks that efforts by current firms towards creating the metaverse are not going anywhere.

One of the most outstanding corporations showing interest in the Metaverse landscape is Meta Inc. (formerly Facebook).

Buterin talked about Meta Inc., as part of his critique of the corporate players entering the space. On early Sunday, Buterin tweeted: “Anything Facebook creates now will misfire” and added that Metaverse-focused firms would likely fail because “it’s far too early to know what people actually want.”

Are Metaverse-Focused Companies Really Making Profit?

Butern’s announcement comes after Meta Platforms, last week on Wednesday, posted a second-quarter loss of $2.81 billion in its Reality Labs, a division in charge of Meta’s augmented, virtual reality, and Metaverse operations.

That figure was down slightly from the loss that Reality Labs witnessed in the first quarter – $2.96 billion.

Reality Labs generated revenue of $452 million in the second quarter, down from $695 million in the first quarter. That was a small fraction of the $28.4 billion generated in the second quarter from Meta’s family of apps, which includes Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram.

Meta spent $10 billion on the Metaverse in 2021, but the move to the landscape is dragging its profitability down.

Meta is currently facing financial difficulties that, in its long history, it has never witnessed in the last 10 years.

Facebook’s decade-long streak of the nonstop revenue growth came to an end this year as its Reality Labs division continues to lose billions of dollars. Last week, the social media giant said that it expects such losses to grow in the third quarter.

In October last year, Mark Zuckerberg changed Facebook’s brand name to Meta Inc., as part of a broader strategy shift toward the so-called metaverse that aims at introducing people to shared virtual worlds.

Apart from Meta Inc., some of the major tech giants that have invested big in Metaverse, including Microsoft, Nvidia, Unity Software, Shopify, Roblox, and Qualcomm.

Roblox is one of the biggest success stories in the metaverse. While the global gaming platform has 54 million users a day in the metaverse, its revenue has been quite low, an opposite scenario from what people may expect in real life. Fortunes media elaborated that in early June.

This means that these companies have still not developed metaverse products that users find useful. And therefore, still have a long way to go to prove Buterin wrong.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / /

Following Meta, Yahoo Announces Metaverse Activities in Hong Kong

American web services provider Yahoo has announced that it is launching a series of metaverse activities in Hong Kong.

Webp.net-resizeimage - 2022-06-16T151744.822.jpg

Yahoo plans to launch activities to explore the use of immersive advertising technologies. The company’s announcement comes a day after Meta Platforms announced similar plans to use Hong Kong as a testing ground to roll out several metaverse initiatives.

Yahoo’s announcement stated that the company will host virtual concerts and exhibitions on the popular metaverse platform Decentraland. They plan to feature local idols and artists and release a limited amount of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).

“Yahoo Hong Kong has always been providing a wide range of online services that are relevant to people’s daily lives, including using the latest technology to improve and enhance the user experience,” said Lorraine Cheung, head of the audience at Yahoo Hong Kong. “We hope to use the metaverse to connect people regardless of time and physical location.”

Yahoo is also launching an NFT exhibition called “The Abyss of Kwun Tong” this week in collaboration with local creators. The exhibition is about the iconic Hong Kong neighbourhood that has been transformed by redevelopment projects.

Other tech companies such as Meta and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics have also chosen Hong Kong as a testing ground to pursue metaverse-related activities.

Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp’s owner Meta announced on June 14 that the company will partner with local firms such as cafes, schools and art hubs to deliver “first-hand” metaverse experiences in the city. Another part of the plan is to explore the potential use of metaverse in daily life.

As part of the experience, Meta plans to host virtual reality (VR) exhibitions at local cafes and augmented reality (AR) training workshops for educators and school pupils. The company also plans to work with local Hong Kong artists and share their NFTs gigs on Instagram.

Meta on Tuesday said that it will work with local partners such as cafe chains, schools and art institutions to provide “first-hand” metaverse experiences in the city and explore the potential use of the metaverse in daily life. This will include VR exhibitions at local cafes and open AR training workshops for educators and secondary school students. It will also work with local creators in Hong Kong and share their non-fungible token projects on Instagram.

The metaverse is a virtual world where people are expected to socialise, play, trade and work in the future. 

Meanwhile, the asset management arm of Samsung Electronics launched Hong Kong’s first exchange-traded fund (ETF) earlier this week, focusing on blockchain technology. The move underpins the development of the metaverse.

According to the South China Morning Post, Amazon.com is also planning to establish its foothold in Hong Kong with its cloud computing business unit Amazon Web Services. 

The company is planning a strategic collaboration with Hong Kong Science Park to nurture local tech professionals and help start-ups in biotechnology, artificial intelligence and software-as-a-service fields.

Image source: Shutterstock

Source

Tagged : / / / /

Crypto patent-sharing marks a step in democratizing knowledge ownership

One of the hallmarks of the crypto industry since its inception has been its commitment to open source development as well as its transparency-centric ethos. This is best made evident by the fact that many prominent projects operating within the digital asset sector and decentralized finance (DeFi) arena today have essentially been derived from other prominent projects such as Bitcoin Cash, SushiSwap and many others.

In this regard, the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA), a group that promotes the advancement of cryptocurrency-enabled technologies by removing patents as a barrier to growth and innovation, recently welcomed social media giant Meta as a member, with the latter vowing to make all of its crypto patents accessible to the world.

To elaborate, Meta — formerly known as Facebook — published a statement announcing that by joining COPA, it will become one of the 30 firms committed to not enforcing their “core cryptocurrency patents.” On the subject, the alliance’s general manager, Max Sills, pointed out that core cryptocurrency patents refer to those technologies that allow for the “creation, mining, storage, transmission, settlement, integrity or security of cryptocurrencies.”

The goal of the association is to accrue patents from its members to create a collective patent library that will help stimulate innovation within the global blockchain sector by reducing instances of patent litigation. Soon after the development came to light, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey applauded Meta’s decision, stating that the crypto market functions best when the interests of everyone (not just the wealthy) are considered.

The market reacts to Meta’s move

Antoni Trenchev, co-founder and managing partner at Nexo, a cryptocurrency lending ecosystem, told Cointelegraph that Meta’s decision to join COPA shows that the multinational is up to something big — in the best way possible — adding:

“The fact that the company is solidifying pathways to patenting crypto and blockchain technological innovations means it likely plans on making some such advancements of its own. That’s an auspicious outlook for the space, one that tells us Meta is getting into the very building blocks of our future on-chain life.”

Igneus Terrenus, head of communications for cryptocurrency exchange Bybit, told Cointelegraph that the last few months have not been kind on Meta, referring primarily to its failed Diem project. In his eyes, however, the move to join COPA shows that the firm’s ambition within the burgeoning Web3 space has not yet died and that the company still fancies itself in the ranks of crypto’s “finance heavyweight elites.”

A similar opinion was echoed by Humayun Sheikh, CEO and founder of Fetch.ai, an open-source decentralized machine learning platform, who believes that with Diem no longer Meta’s primary focus, the company is ready to explore other areas for its grand vision for the Metaverse. However, he noted:

“The vision may sound appealing on paper but blockchain is an intensely contested space where companies will be keen to protect their patents. Therefore, it remains to be seen whether the vision could translate into adoption.”

Harjyot Singh, technology director at HUMAN protocol, a blockchain-based hybrid framework for organizing, evaluating and compensating human labor, told Cointelegraph that while it is best to not jump the gun as to what Meta’s move may mean in the long run, the development is exciting nonetheless. “Meta joining the board of COPA indicates not only that they are interested but also genuinely keen on keeping the space open and collaborative,” he added.

COPA’s potential impact

When asked about what organizations like COPA can potentially achieve to help strengthen the crypto sector, Sheikh stated that while, on paper, the vision of such alliances may sound quite appealing, blockchain is an intensely contested space where companies will be keen to protect their patents. “Therefore, it remains to be seen whether the vision could translate into adoption,” he stated.

He noted that blockchain technology has democratized access for those who were previously unable to benefit from a new digital economic model, adding that whenever a community builds a new technology it “must protect it by obtaining patent rights” and thus initiatives like COPA could be perceived as anti-competitive within the industry.

Additionally, Terrenus believes that it doesn’t rest on COPA’s shoulders alone to keep the crypto industry transparent and open. However, he said that the firm has been doing its bit over the last many months, alluding particularly to the COPA v. Wright lawsuit. The alliance took legal action against Australian inventor Craig Wright who tried to copyright Bitcoin’s white paper in 2021, claiming that he was the asset’s pseudonymous inventor Satoshi Nakamoto. Terrenus stated:

“With cryptocurrency and its adoption still in the early stages, there is much that has yet to be determined as to how organizations like COPA can support and contribute to the growth of the digital economy. In order for the industry to thrive, there is a need for constructive dialogues between regulators and experts to allow for innovation for the benefit of all.”

While it would be easy to say that COPA has not done much, Singh believes that is most likely because there isn’t a huge problem with regard to patenting right now, especially given that the open-source culture of this still very young industry. “I imagine they’re planning for future growth, mainstream adoption and, particularly, for the introduction of the more legislatively minded Web 2.0 companies. That’s why Meta coming on board is interesting,” he added.

Trenchev believes that the best way to ensure that COPA and its patenting system have palpable sway, authority and usage within the crypto industry is by garnering support and endorsement from key companies in blockchain:

“COPA is still in the preliminary stages of its mission of bolstering technological development in the blockchain industry. The organization appears to be working on building a solid reputation and establishing its presence among big names in crypto and beyond which will enable it to facilitate tangible contributions to blockchain in the future.”

COPA market clout continues to grow

In addition to having onboarded Meta, COPA has also been quietly mustering mainstream support from a number of other prominent crypto projects. In this regard, the firm has been able to accrue the backing of trading platform Coinbase as well as United States-based payments provider Square.

The organization has also entered into long-term partnerships with cryptocurrency exchanges like OKCoin and Kraken as well as Bitcoin- (BTC)-centric R&D group ChaincodeLabs. Not only that, the alliance recently welcomed Michael Saylor who led fintech giant MicroStrategy, DeFi exchange Uniswap and blockchain-based smart transaction platform Chia project to its board of members.

That said, there is a possibility that smaller companies functioning and innovating within the blockchain space could feel threatened by COPA’s increasing market presence since the space was built largely by underdogs that have now grown into full-fledged unicorns and don’t want to lose their weight in the sector. Trenchev said:

“What I would say to this is that innovation sprouts from competition and collaboration, so Meta’s quite clear indications of serious involvement in crypto will propel us all forward.”

Therefore, as we move into a future driven by blockchain and crypto-enabled tech, it will be interesting to see how organizations like COPA are able to affect the development of this industry, especially as more mainstream entities continue to enter the space with each passing day.