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Why breaking up Facebook is actually a terrible idea

May 10, 2019, 04:11 IST

100 life-sized cutouts of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg sit on the lawn of the U.S. Capitol on April 10, 2018 in Washington, DC.Zach Gibson/Getty Images

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  • Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes says Facebook's power is so great across all of the tools billions of people use, that it needs to be stopped.
  • And he's right.
  • But his solution to break Facebook up into separately traded companies, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, while emotionally satisfying, is flawed.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes has made a compelling case about why Facebook, and its CEO Mark Zuckerbergare too powerful.

The company hasn't just been sloppy over its privacy practices, as Hughes writes in a 6,000-word opinion piece in the New York Times, it's been deceitful; promising its users for years that it takes privacy seriously when behind the scenes it's done everything from tricking people into handing over their email address books (and then storing them) to using a VPN app to track people, including teens (a VPN is supposed to protect a person from spying eyes).

Read: The CEO of a $1.3 billion startup backed by Mary Meeker, Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey, apologizes after sexual harassment allegations emerge

Facebook's lax attitudes fueled the Cambridge Analytica scandal, allowed Russian agents to interfere in elections worldwide, allowed made-up stories to pose as news, enabled the proliferation of hate groups and live violent videos, and so on.

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Although Zuckerberg is a nice guy by Hughes account of him, and he was hauled before Congress to answer questions for hours, blow-back onto him has been negligible. Revenues are soaring, users of its family of products, Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram are growing. The stock, while not at its peak, is trading high, at nearly $190 a share.

Hughes says Facebook's power is so great across all of the tools billions of people use, that it needs to be stopped.

And he's right.

But his solution to break Facebook up into separately traded companies, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, while an emotionally satisfying thought (retribution!) is flawed.

Breaking up Facebook would create three (or more) smaller, public entities that would all feel pressured to grow. These "Baby Facebooks" would all have been raised in the same growth-at-all-costs culture, but now they'd be acting on their own, without the unifying influence and objectives of a parent.

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And, depending how the breakup occurred, Zuckerberg could remain a large shareholder, and a powerhouse, behind all of them, still.

So instead of one Zuckerberg ruling over an empire increasingly coming under public scrutiny, the world would get three of them. And, as smaller entities without the same level of attention focused on a giant like Facebook, the practices of these Baby Facebooks might fall under the radar.

Problem solved? Not really.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, second from right, leaves the Rayburn House Office Building after testifying before a House Energy and Commerce hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, April 11, 2018, about the use of Facebook data to target American voters in the 2016 election and data privacy.AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

Regulation is part of the solution, as long as there are criminal teeth to it. If a company's businesses can be seized and its executives thrown in jail, similar to insider trading regulations, that might scare them. Civil regulations that slap financial penalties. That's much more of a yawn. Facebook is preparing to pay a whopping $5 billion to the Federal Trade Commission. But to a company worth half a trillion dollars, that's a slap on the wrist.

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Don't dismiss technical solutions to this problem

The real solution might be, believe it or not, a technical one, and something one public company is already working on. Okta CEO Todd McKinnon is trying to create an industry standard for digital identities, one that puts each individual person in control of what digital information gets shared about themselves.

Instead of handing over your email address, phone number, names of the people in your photos to whatever website asks you, each of us would have a digital identity wallet. We would be able to share and revoke our digital information as we see fit, as McKinnon sees it.

Okta makes its living offering a service that lets companies managing employee digital identities. Things like passwords and access rights.

So McKinnon isn't creating this as some kind of digital identity product (although eventually he certainly will). He says he wants to create an industry standard, where lots of companies help create the tech and use the tech and multiple companies like Okta will sell versions of it.

His plan is to get his customers, big enterprise companies like JetBlue and Major League Baseball, to help him. They want to learn about their customers, but don't want to be caught in a privacy scandal by gathering data that gets hacked and misused.

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"I tell them that this backlash on tech is going to reflect on them," McKinnon tells us. "I think vendors and tech companies need to do more. I think Silicon Valley is, as the epicenter of tech, it's a bit of a wake up call for us. We've thought that tech was all good and we underestimated the risks of it."

But he announced his idea to create a Universal Identity standard a year ago at his tech conference and admits to Business Insider that it's been slow going getting this off the ground so far.

So breaking up Facebook definitely feels good to think about. But unless consumers gain a means to have control over their data (and regulators create laws with teeth), instead of crushing a giant, we'd be cutting off one head and watching three grow back.

NOW WATCH: If you're going to see the 3-hour-long 'Avengers: Endgame,' plan your bathroom break wisely. Here's what can happen if you hold your pee too long.

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