The Largest Acquisition in History: Facebook and WhatsApp: $19 billion with the proximate
goal of 2 billion users. The question immediately comes to mind: what is the driving
force behind this immensity of money and product? The answer is that there is
no “product.” What drives the entire phenomenon is the internal need of every
person to be in relation. The human person as made in the image and likeness of
a reality we cannot describe within the epistemological landscape of external sensation,
the divine Person of the Son of God, is the “product” that is driving this
entire venture. It is taboo to attempt to say that the meaning of the
prototypical Person is pure relation,
because we cannot sense or imagine that. Within our cosmic experience and perception,
there is no such thing as pure relation. Relation, for us, empirically, only
takes place between what we call “substances,” that is “things” which appear to
be “in themselves,” but which in reality correspond to our way of forming
concepts as abstractions. However, we can approach reality even more directly
by attending to experience which we have, not only through sensation and
abstraction, but also of the self. We experience the reality of peace, joy, guilt,
responsibility, freedom… And it is there that we can also experience the self –
in relation. And since it is
experiential, it is also being. Ask a young woman or man who is in love about
who they are.
These thoughts
occur when considering the “product” of this immense empirical and financial
phenomenon.
Today’s news on same (NYT, Tues. February 25, 2014:
“WhatsApp, the globally
popular texting app that Facebook just acquired for a
whopping $19 billion, is adding phone calls to its list of services.
At the Mobile World
Congress in Barcelona, Spain, WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum said the voice service will
be free and begin rolling out to users within the next few months.
Currently, WhatsApp
offers unlimited text and voice-mail messages between users. Its service is
free for the first year, then costs 99 cents annually.
We
want to make sure people always have the ability to stay in touch with their
friends and loved ones really affordably," Koum said in a speech at
Mobile World Congress.
As reported by multiple
news outlets, Koum also announced that WhatsApp now has 465 million monthly
users and 330 million daily users. The latter is 15 million more than what was
made public last week when Facebook announced the purchase.
Voice service will come
first to Apple devices and Google's Android operating system, with Windows
phones and Blackberry to follow.
The move puts WhatsApp
in competition not only with other messaging apps that offer voice but chat
tools such as Skype and even mobile carriers. WhatsApp's unlimited
texting has already helped establish it in places where smartphones and fancy
data plans are less common.
It has 40 million users
in India and another 38 million in Brazil, two countries highly coveted by tech
companies such as Facebook for their large populations and emerging mobile
customer base. WhatsApp hasn't released figures for the United States, where it is less
popular.
Last week, Facebook
shocked the business world when it announced it was buying WhatsApp for up to
$19 billion in cash and stock -- by far the social network's largest
acquisition to date.”
No comments:
Post a Comment