Skip to the content
Context
Search for:
Context
  • Categories
    Analysis article
    20
    Analysis report
    28
    Book
    2
    Byline article
    244
    Conference report
    322
    Feature article
    51
    Interview
    209
    Interview story
    3,438
    News article
    481
    Opinion article
    2
    Promo article
    7
    Session
    45
    Uncategorised
    6,408
    Vendor report
    8
  • Focuses
    Company earnings
    494
    Company funding
    401
    Company hires
    608
    Company IPO
    56
    Company M&A
    638
    Company research
    7
    Company strategy
    3,771
    Consumer indicators
    76
    Essays
    15
    Interesting
    44
    Market trends
    109
    Views of analyst
    61
    Views of executive
    3,836
  • Companies
    2,419
  • Sources
    181
  • Series
    388
  • Topics
    189
  • People
    2,427
  • Clients
    130
  1. Home
  2. Categories
  3. Uncategorised

Zuckerberg: All Of Media Should Go Social Like Games Have

By Robert Andrews
Originally published by paidContent paidContent, paidContent paidcontent:uk, paidContent paidcontent.org • 25th May 2011

Facebook won’t try to offer music, movie or book services – but CEO Mark Zuckerberg has grand pronouncements for those sectors nevertheless.

“Is Facebook going to do those? No way,” he said on stage during an awkward one-on-one with Publicis CEO Maurice Levy at the eG8 forum in Paris on Wednesday. “We don’t have the DNA to be a music company or a movie company.

“But I hope we can help those companies become more social. We’re going to see a lot of the transformation in these industries over the next three, five years that we have with gaming so far.”

Whilst almost religiously celebrating internet users’ ability to share more and more and more with each other online, Zuckerberg lauded Zynga and Playfish for “baking the principles of social design” in to games.

The corollary of this for music, movies, books and news, he said: “In each of these industries – the media ones are going to be big ones… in the music industry, it’s going to be people who understand music and people; in the movie industry, it’s going to be people who understand movies and people.

“The gaming industry has been completely transformed. Social gaming has taken off from scratch to be, the biggest companies in the gaming industry are now social games companies.

“People listen to music with friends, you read news and discuss it with friends. These industries can be rebuilt from the ground up with social. The opportunities when you make these companies social are a lot bigger than they are (in their current form).”

And then Zuckerberg tried and failed to dig himself out of a hole. His recent pronouncements about letting under-13s use Facebook have provoked concerned tabloid headlines about paedophiles and such like…

“That’s not what I said,” Zuckerberg said. “The current regulations make it difficult for people aged under 13 to use Facebook. In the U.S., a parent has to either fax in a signature or have a credit card and verify they want their child to sign up.

“So we just haven’t gone there yet. We haven’t tried to figure our how to make a service that’s accessible to people under 13.

“We’re doing a lot of things right now … but we’re not trying to work on the ability for people under 13 to sign up.

“In the future, it makes sense to explore that. We would need to try to figure out a lot of ways to make sure they are safe. That’s extremely important. That’s not on the top of the list for things for us to figure out right now.”

In other words, Zuckerberg would like under-13s to join Facebook, when a way can be found. Maybe he will get an opportunity to discuss the options when he meets world leaders at Thursday’s G8 summit.

CategoriesUncategorised
Tagsnews sharing
FocusCompany strategy
TopicSocial Media
CompanyFacebook
SourcepaidContent, paidcontent:uk, paidcontent.org
ClientContentNext


© 2025 Context