Why Zuck Doesnt Give A F**k About The Virtue-Signaling Ad Boycott July 7, 2020
Why Zuck Doesn't Give A F**k About The Virtue-Signaling Ad Boycott. More companies are cancelling their Facebook advertising campaigns amid the #StopHateForProfit boycott, a movement aiming to hold social media and tech companies like Facebook accountable for hate speech and online harassment on their platforms.
However, as Statistas Willem Roper notes, while large companies like Target, Microsoft, Starbucks and others are removing ads from Facebook, revenue data for the social media giant shows just how little it affects the companys overall advertising profits.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the top eight boycotting companies by spending made up just $57 million of Facebooks advertising revenue in May. Microsoft, the largest, spent roughly $10.4 million, and Starbucks was right behind with around $8.1 million. Those top eight were just over 10 percent of what the top 100 U.S. advertisers spent on Facebook for the month. Compare those numbers to $34 billion what Facebook made from just U.S. and Canada companies in 2019. Globally, Facebook made nearly $70 billion in 2019 from advertising revenue alone.
While large companies boycotting Facebook attract news headlines, these numbers show that they have very little impact on the companys overall advertising revenue.
The Wall Street Journal also showed how 76 percent of Facebooks total $69 billion in global advertising revenue is from small to medium-sized companies, with just 24 percent from larger corporations and companies.
Poster Comment:
Facebook owns property in Hawaii. Native Hawaiians who have their plots inside of Facebook's property cannot get to it without being charged with trespassing.
Zuckerborg also agreed to allow China to censor Facebook just so he could get access to the Chinese markets.