Facebook

Facebook is a widely-used app that is available for iOS and iPadOS. It can also be accessed through a web browser by desktop or laptop computers. Account registration is required for access.

History
The company was founded as TheFacebook in 2004. The Facebook app for iPhone OS (later iOS) was first released on July 10, 2008. By 2010, Facebook surpassed Google as the most visited internet site in some countries.

Privacy issues
In 2012, Apple introduced the ability for users to share content with Facebook from devices running iOS 6 or Mac OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion). Privacy concerns over how user data was being used led Apple to remove Facebook integration from iOS 11 in 2017, and macOS Mojave (10.14) in 2018. However, it remained the third most visited site in the world in February 2021, behind Google and YouTube.

On October 4, 2021, the entire Facebook system, including its subsidiaries Instagram and WhatsApp were taken offline by an internal while its stock lost tens of billions of dollars in market value. Twitter CEO inquired about buying the facebook.com domain. In February 2022, Facebook's parent company lost several hundreds of billions in market value after posting disappointing earnings reports, citing growing competition from TikTok, along with ten billion dollars in lost annual revenue due to anti-tracking and privacy features introduced by Apple. Facebook subsequently noted the "iOS changes" as a leading cause of its "massive" hiring freeze, after a 40% loss in market value. However, its lower may allow it to fall below the threshold of.

Metaverse
Facebook had changed its name to in October 2021 in preparation of launching a "". Meta criticized Apple for its 30% commission on App Store sales, even though Apple was charging most developers only 15%. Meta CEO pledged to charge less than the 30% cut taken by other platforms in 2021. However, in April 2022, Meta subsidiary confirmed that the Meta Quest Store would be charging fees of up to 47.5% for VR apps and games. Despite criticism for its "hypocrisy", Vivek Sharma, Meta's VP of its Horizon Worlds subsidiary, called the fees "competitive", stating that "We believe in the other platforms being able to have their share."