

"GDPR has not had a revenue impact, but we also recognize it wasn't fully rolled out this quarter," she told analysts. While revenue and average revenue per user look intact for now, any sign of cratering engagement could scare advertisers away from Facebook's core platform.įacebook appears to know that, with its chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, noting that advertisers were still adapting to the new rules. This is why any sign of decline in Europe is so drastic. This is how much Facebook makes per user in its biggest markets: It's the second-biggest by active users, behind Asia-Pacific, and the second-biggest in how much money the company makes per user, behind the US. Losing money and users in its 2nd-biggest market would be bad news for FacebookĮurope until now had been a stable market for Facebook. In other words, a court could find that Facebook hasn't complied with GDPR, fine the company, and then force even stricter privacy measures that affect its European user base even more. "While those actions might take time to play out, it is still possible that threatened fines associated with GDPR to Facebook or other sellers of advertising could also have the effect of spooking advertisers into changing how they use data with media owners." That goes against the spirit of GDPR, which says companies can't penalize users for not sharing information.Īs the Pivotal analyst Brian Wieser put it: "Our view is that the company is far from 'out of the woods' as the bundling of consent for Facebook to use consumer data with access to the platform appears to be an aggressive interpretation of GDPR, and one that might be more subject to eventual regulatory action.

At the moment, Facebook tells users who don't share certain types of data that they won't be able to use parts of its platform. The decline shows that Facebook, which seemed to be infallible, isn't invincible against regulation.Īnd whether Facebook is even properly complying with GDPR is under some contention. Given that GDPR affected only part of Facebook's second quarter, there could be knock-on effects in the third quarter. Facebook began showing its privacy notifications around May 24 to comply with the new rules.įacebook's thesis is that these notifications turned off its European users, who then spent less time on the platform and have perhaps become more privacy-conscious. GDPR kicked in on May 25, two-thirds of the way through Facebook's second quarter. Europe only rolled out its new privacy rules in late May - so Facebook will continue to feel its impact into the next quarter There are multiple signs Europe won't recover. "We had indicated in the first quarter that we would expect to see a decline." He then specifically said Facebook wouldn't be providing guidance on monthly active users or daily active users in Europe on the call.
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" don't have any update on trends," Facebook CFO David Wehner said in the company's earnings call.

GDPR was specifically designed to bring the big tech firms to heel, and it regulates how companies use people's data.Įxecutives noticeably avoided talking about the ongoing impact of GDPR beyond the second quarter. "We did see a decline in monthly actives in Europe, down by about 1 million people as a result." "GDPR was an important moment for our industry," CEO Mark Zuckerberg told analysts. The US stayed flat quarter-over-quarter at 241 million monthly active users.įacebook blamed the decline on "currency headwinds" and Europe's new privacy-focused regulation, known as GDPR. It's the only region where Facebook saw declines, with the biggest region, Asia-Pacific, jumping to 894 million users from 873 million. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.
