It’s hard to see how the ‘platform power’ of the likes of Amazon can be curbed, given that they are running vital cloud services

Pardon me for a moment while I shed a few crocodile tears. The proximate cause of this grief is the news that the revenues of Snap, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube are down by an estimated $9.85bn in the second half of this year. Just to put that in context, as I write, the stock market valuations of the first three of these behemoths are $86.9bn, $930.36bn and $44.07bn respectively. YouTube is harder to estimate because it’s part of Alphabet, its holding company, but since that’s valued at $1.93tn (that’s trillion, by the way) we may safely assume that YouTube’s revenue decline was, as engineers say, “in the noise”.

And yet all these outfits were complaining loudly at the injustice that had been done to them by one of their peers – Apple. Why so? Well, back in April, the iPhone manufacturer introduced its grandly named app-tracking transparency policy via a tweak to its mobile operating system, which forced iPhone apps to ask for permission before they tracked the behaviour of users to serve them personalised ads.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Hodgkinson heartbreak as Moraa beats her to Commonwealth Games gold

Kenyan stuns English runner with unconventional late surge Scotland’s Laura Muir takes…

As Boris Johnson loses control, Keir Starmer is starting to get a grip | Polly Toynbee

It’s a long way back – but the Labour conference is revealing…

Nasa warns dead 2.5ton ‘space junk’ satellite will crash to earth today – and they don’t know where it will land

A DEAD satellite is set to crash to Earth today after nearly…