Editor’s Note: You can bet this shift is going to be tied in with government surveillance too. If you truly want privacy on a social media platform that doesn’t censor you, listens to your concerns and maintains your privacy, then check out USA.Life today! Feel free to friend me when you do.

Chris Cox, one of Facebook’s early engineers and a close friend of Mr. Zuckerberg abruptly stepped down Thursday. WhatsApp unit head Chris Daniels also stepped down on Thursday. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is remaking the company to focus more on private messaging—and less on public sharing, the very thing that Facebook is.

It’s hard to imagine people trusting Facebook with their private messages.

They won’t.

Or that folks even need another messaging app.

They don’t.

Add to that the Herculean task of creating new ways of making money besides the advertising machine that currently generates 98% of Facebook’s revenue (based on Facebook’s current model).

In decades to come, this is going to be a business school textbook case of how one of the most successful companies in history willfully self-destructed.

This is a terrible idea.

Let’s be real here. Mark Zuckerberg is not an idea man. He is great at stealing and/or buying other people’s great ideas. He is not known for having great ideas. And this shift from what made Facebook great to something else entirely is, in a word, nuts.

Facebook on Thursday announced that its chief product officer, Chris Cox, and Chris Daniels, the head of WhatsApp, were leaving the company.

A telling line in Cox’s goodbye letter suggests there were significant disagreements over Mark Zuckerberg’s plan to pivot Facebook to privacy.

This was backed up by a report in The New York Times, which said there were frustrations over Zuckerberg’s vision for the company.

TWO TOP FACEBOOK EXECUTIVES ARE DEPARTING EXITS COME DAYS AFTER CEO MARK ZUCKERBERG SAID HE WANTED TO SHIFT FACEBOOK’S FOCUS MORE TO PRIVATE MESSAGING AND COMMUNICATIONS By: Wall Street Journal March 14, 2019: A senior Facebook Inc. executive viewed as a potential successor to Mark Zuckerberg abruptly stepped down Thursday, signaling that he disagrees with the CEO’s new focus on private messaging at the social-networking giant. Chris Cox, one of Facebook’s early engineers and a close friend of Mr. Zuckerberg, said he decided to leave the company to enable new leadership to pull off the shift in direction. Ten months ago, Mr. Cox was promoted to oversee the company’s three main platforms: Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. WhatsApp unit head Chris Daniels also stepped down on Thursday. The moves together show that Mr. Zuckerberg’s stated plan to focus more on private messaging—and less on public sharing—is roiling the company he founded, including a second management shuffle in less than a year. While Mr. Cox, 36 years old, didn’t explicitly state a reason for his departure, he said Facebook’s pivot would benefit from different leadership. In a previous role, Mr. Cox oversaw the Facebook News Feed, which will be less prominent under the new structure Mr. Zuckerberg is planning. “This will be a big project and we will need leaders who are excited to see the new direction through,” Mr. Cox wrote in a statement. He thanked Mr. Zuckerberg for “creating this place, and for the chance to work beside a dear friend for over thirteen years.” A week ago, Mr. Zuckerberg said Facebook plans to offer encrypted messaging across all its major products and allow people to make conversations ephemeral. That would boost privacy and enable conversations held more like in a living room, rather than the public square, and also allow the company to offer more services such as payments and e-commerce within those messaging services. Doing so, however, requires the company to perfect new ways of making money besides the advertising machine that currently generates 98% of its revenue and pursue other priorities besides driving growth to the existing platforms. While the outlines are clear, Facebook has offered few details and company officials have acknowledged significant open questions about what the shared messaging platform and business model would look like. Personnel changes announced Thursday indicate Mr. Zuckerberg is putting in place a management team that is fully on board with the new direction. “While it is sad to lose such great people, this also creates opportunities for more great leaders who are energized about the path ahead to take on new and bigger roles,’ Mr. Zuckerberg said in the Facebook post announcing the moves. In the wake of Mr. Cox’s departure, Fidji Simo has been promoted to oversee the Facebook app, and Will Cathcart will replace Mr. Daniels as the head of WhatsApp. Those executives and current Instagram chief Adam Mosseri will report to Mr. Zuckerberg directly, while Antonio Lucio, who joined the company as chief marketing officer last year, will report to Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg. Mr. Zuckerberg also said Javier Olivan would oversee integrating messaging and direct “where our apps should be more integrated.” “Whenever there is a shift in strategy, it’s not unusual to see some personnel changes,” said eMarketer senior analyst Jasmine Enberg. “What we do know is that Zuckerberg has a new vision for Facebook that will be more focused on private communication. That’s a big shift for the company, which was built around public sharing.” Facebook’s leadership was unusually stable for most of the first dozen years or so following its launch from Mr. Zuckerberg’s Harvard dorm in 2004. Over the past 18 months or so, though, the company has been buffeted by a number of management changes that have one common denominator: a disagreement with Mr. Zuckerberg over strategic changes. The founders of WhatsApp and Instagram, Facebook’s hugely successful acquisitions, left the company during 2017 and 2018. WhatsApp’s Brian Acton and Jan Koum disagreed with Mr. Zuckerberg’s plans to monetize the messaging service, while Instagram’s Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger grew frustrated over a number of changes Mr. Zuckerberg was pushing on the photo-sharing app, which had previously enjoyed considerable autonomy. Mr. Cox was viewed as a stable lieutenant, having worked closely alongside Mr. Zuckerberg for more than a decade. “Chris Cox leaving is depressing” said BTIG Research analyst Rich Greenfield, adding that “Chris has made it easier for himself to leave by building the teams he has over the years.” Prior to Mr. Cox’s promotion last year, he oversaw the core Facebook product, where growth has begun to slow. Though still producing the overwhelming majority of the company’s revenue, the platform has approached saturation in some markets and seen user activity plateau or decline in others. Mr. Zuckerberg obliquely referenced social-media users’ changing preferences in announcing the company’s pivot to messaging last week. While user-activity metrics are closely held by the company, a series of independent research firms suggest the share of Facebook users who regularly post status updates and photos has been falling, while the numbers who are chatting one-to-one or in small groups is on the rise. Mr. Daniels’s departure, while less high-profile, is also notable. As head of WhatsApp, he oversaw the hugely popular messaging service that many regarded as a template for what Mr. Zuckerberg hopes to create across the company. Mr. Daniels joined Facebook in 2011 after stints at Microsoft Corp.and Lehman Brothers, and before his WhatsApp assignment he ran Internet.org, the company’s effort to push a free, Facebook-flavored product around the globe. Mr. Daniels wasn’t available for comment.

Article posted with permission from Pamela Geller

The Washington Standard