Saturday, 16 March 2019
WhatsApp co-founder asks students to delete Facebook app from their phones
Mr Acton, now the head of non-profit WhatsApp rival Signal, blasted Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg for trading privacy for revenue by allowing ads on his platform.
He has now called for people to 'reject' Facebook by deleting its family of apps from their smartphones and other devices.
It comes after the world's largest social network has been beset by a string of privacy scandals.
Mr Acton has been openly critical of Silicon Valley firms like Facebook and Google in the past for their seemingly profit-driven approach at the expense of people's data.
It is the second time that Mr Acton has made the comment publicly. Last year he posted on Twitter 'It is time. #delete facebook' following Facebook's failings involving a political consultancy firm.
The data of 87 million users was improperly accessed by Cambridge Analytica, linked to the 2016 Trump presidential campaign.
Facebook is also facing a slew of lawsuits and regulatory inquiries over its privacy practices, including ongoing investigations by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission and two state agencies in New York.
In 2014, Acton sold the instant messaging service to Mark Zuckerberg for $19 billion (£15bn) and left in 2017 over its plans to introduce ads to the app.
Mr Acton defended his decision to sell saying that he wanted his employees and investors to profit and he didn't have the power, or 'clout' to say no.
Speaking at Stanford University in California, Mr Acton said: 'I had 50 employees, and I had to think about them and the money they would make from this sale.'
'I had to think about our investors and I had to think about my minority stake. I didn't have the full clout to say no if I wanted to.'
Jan Koum, WhatsApp's co-founder, also left Facebook a year later in 2018 because he reportedly didn't agree with their approach to user data and privacy.
Both Mr Acton and Mr Koum had tried to find a way to monetise WhatsApp without bombarding users with adverts.
He said that he pushed for a business model that would charge WhatsApp users $1 a year to use the app, as the company did in its early days.
'It was not extraordinarily money-making, and if you have a billion users … you're going to have $1 billion in revenue per year,' Mr Acton said.
'That's not what Google and Facebook want. They want multibillions of dollars.'
In an interview with Forbes, Mr Acton described how Facebook had set goals for WhatsApp to hit a revenue run rate of $10 billion within five years by pushing ads.
He also spoke about the company plans to offer businesses ways to directly communicate with users.
'The capitalistic profit motive, or answering to Wall Street, is what's driving the expansion of invasion of data privacy and driving the expansion of a lot of negative outcomes that we're just not happy with,' he said.
'I wish there were guardrails there. I wish there was ways to rein it in. I have yet to see that manifest, and that scares me.'
Daily Mail Online
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