Did Facebook Just Declare War on Apple?


By now, you may have heard about the major changes coming to Facebook, as announced at today’s F8 conference. Namely, the overhauled Timelines and new apps that use the next generation of “Open Graph” technology to make them deeper and more relevant to your life.

It doesn’t take a genius to look at the technology headlines and see that they’re dominated these days by three major players: Apple, Facebook, and Google. What’s fascinating about this is that these three companies don’t appear to be competitors on the surface. Apple specializes in personal hardware and software. Facebook is a social media platform. Google is known as the world’s most-used search engine.

Yet all three companies are interested in being your one-stop source for all things new media. All three companies want to be the center of your online universe. And all three companies are making apps a key component of their business models.

Today, Facebook announced a huge upgrade to their apps — including a whole new set of tools for developers’ use — that’s going to bring better and more useful apps to the masses. And the one thing Facebook’s people were saying repeatedly without ever actually saying it, is that anyone can use Facebook’s apps — not just those who own a certain brand of hardware. Any kind of user can access Facebook apps, on any hardware platform or OS. No special membership required, aside from a Facebook profile (and who doesn’t have one of those? even my mother is on Facebook).

As part of its overview of the new Open Graph apps technology, Facebook flaunted a new debut partner: The Daily. As in, the custom-made daily newsmagazine app made specifically for the iPad platform. For the first time, The Daily is coming to another platform (granted, in a truncated form), and the platform they’ve chosen is Facebook. And then there’s Spotify. Hulu. Netflix. And more.

Apple is still the king of apps by a gigantic margin, and that’s not likely to change in the immediate future. But Facebook is offering developers and publishers a very attractive platform for their wares — a platform with a proven track record (need I even mention Facebook’s wildly popular social game apps?) and a wellspring that neither Apple nor even Google can claim: direct, built-in, one-click-simple interaction between its 800 million users. Popular apps on Facebook spread like wildfire because of the very nature of Facebook’s friend feeds and that overrated “Like” button.

Will the new capabilities of Open Graph make a dent in Apple’s multi-billion dollar app business? I have no idea. Probably not anytime soon.

But I can tell you this much: tonight, there are an awful lot of app developers looking at Facebook with brand new eyes.


Kokou Adzo

Kokou Adzo is a stalwart in the tech journalism community, has been chronicling the ever-evolving world of Apple products and innovations for over a decade. As a Senior Author at Apple Gazette, Kokou combines a deep passion for technology with an innate ability to translate complex tech jargon into relatable insights for everyday users.

6 Comments

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  1. So Facebook has jumped on the web-apps-running-in-a-web-app-browser-window-they-want-to-be-your-home-page bandwagon. lemme think, where have i seen this before … hmmm … oh yeah, Google! except you will pay for these apps – and/or Facebook gets the ad revenue instead of Google.

    i suppose Apple would be the target – if it were actually Google. since it is not, maybe it isn’t, you know? maybe Apple just wants to sell you hardware and doesn’t care what your home page is. Apple’s App Store is a sideline, meant to support its hardware, not a profit center.

    seriously, it should be obvious that Facebook is now Google’s mortal enemy. To Zuckerberg, Apple is irrelevant.

  2. Answer: NO

    When Facebook starts selling devices and stops/blocks Facebook from being on Apple’s devices, then it will have declared war on Apple. For now, it is simply providing Apple (and other) device users with another choice for content. Note that Apple sells content to make sure its users aren’t blocked from content and to make it seamless for its users to get content.

    Your article would’ve been more interesting and accurate if you had delved into how Facebook has been at war with Google for a long time.

  3. The question is will the developers make money for developing the apps or facebook gets a free ride on the apps provided by these sucked developers.