| GIPHY GOOF?: Facebook’s acquisition of the animated image search engine Giphy may harm competition and potentially should be unwound, regulators in the United Kingdom said Thursday. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) provisionally found that the takeover would negatively impact competitiveness in the social media market. “Millions of posts every day on social media sites now include a GIF,” the agency wrote in a blog post. “Any reduction in the choice or quality of these GIFs could significantly affect how people use these sites and whether or not they switch to a different platform, such as Facebook. As most major social media sites that compete with Facebook use Giphy GIFs, and there is only one other large provider of GIFs – Google’s Tenor – these platforms have very little choice.” The CMA also determined that Facebook and its assets Instagram and WhatsApp may account for over 70 percent of time people spend on social media. The regulatory body will now accept responses from relevant parties to its early findings before issuing its final report and recommendations by Oct. 6. Read more. READY TO RUMBLE: Video platform Rumble, which has grown in popularity among conservatives as an alternative to YouTube, has reached agreements with eight "thought leaders" to provide content, including former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii) and journalist Glenn Greenwald. “These prominent new voices add to Rumble’s deep pool of content talent and further enhance the platform’s breadth and depth of offerings to our viewers,” the company said in a blog post Thursday. The platform said it had also reached agreements with comedian Bridget Phetasy, satirist Matt Orfalea, former Washington Examiner writer Siraj Hashmi, Twitter personality Mujahed Kobbe, writer Shant Mesrobian and journalist Zaid Jilani for original content. “Although very diverse, this group of individuals does share one characteristic: a commitment to challenge the status quo, seek the truth, and share it,” Rumble added. Rumble has exploded in popularity in the last year, becoming a haven for conservative voices that frequently violated content moderation policies of more mainstream platforms. As part of the agreement, the creators will get new resources from Rumble to produce videos that will be available exclusively on the platform for some period of time. Read more. DELTA WOES: Facebook joined several major companies Thursday in pushing back its full return to office date amid a surge of coronavirus cases driven by the delta variant. “Data, not dates, is what drives our approach for returning to the office,” spokesperson Tracy Clayton told The Hill in a statement. “Given the recent health data showing rising Covid cases based on the Delta variant, our teams in the US will not be required to go back to the office until January 2022,” he added. “We expect this to be the case for some countries outside of the US, as well.” The Silicon Valley giant started opening up its American offices earlier this year and was planning to ratchet up to 50 percent capacity next month with plans to fully reopen in November. The company last month began requiring vaccinations for employees interested in returning to the office. Masks are currently required in all Facebook offices. Read more. $600M LOST ‘FOR FUN’: A person claiming to be behind the massive $600 million cryptocurrency breach said on Thursday they stole the digital tokens "for fun." Decentralized finance platform Poly Network on Tuesday said it had been breached, resulting in the loss of more than $600 million worth of digital currency. "The amount of money you hacked is the biggest one in the defi history. Law enforcement in any country will regard this as a major economic crime and you will be pursued. It is very unwise for you to do any further transactions," the network said in a statement to the hacker or hackers. Read more here. |
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