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Insiders think they’ve found Facebook’s new name just ‘days before rebrand’

A FORMER Facebook exec has taken a stab at guessing the company’s new name after it was revealed this week to be pondering a rebrand.

Samidh Chakrabarti, who previously worked as Facebook’s civic integrity chief, reckons the US tech titan will operate under the moniker “Meta”.

APMark Zuckerberg is reportedly planning to change Facebook’s name[/caption]

The Verge reported on Tuesday that Facebook plans to change its company name as part of a rebrand expected to be announced in the coming days.

The name will apparently focus on the “metaverse”, a virtual world being developed by the company where users can live, work and play.

News of the rebrand set the internet alight, with joke names like “Bookface” and “Booky McBookface” going viral on social media.

A number of industry experts weighed in with more serious predictions based on information provided to The Verge by a source at Facebook.

“My best guess for the new name: ‘Meta,’” Chakrabarti wrote on Twitter.

“But I’d prefer something more classic like simply ‘A Mark Zuckerberg Production’.”


Zuckerberg is reportedly planning a formal unveiling of the name next Thursday at Connect, the company’s annual virtual reality conference.

The rebrand would likely position Facebook’s social media app as one of many products under a parent company.

That parent company will also reportedly oversee groups like Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus and more.

It follows weeks of intense scrutiny from regulators and lawmakers over Facebook’s business practices.

Another realistic candidate for the new name is “Horizon” after a virtual reality platform the company has been developing.

That would be a nod to Zuckerberg’s desire for his company to be better known for the metaverse.

Facebook has is investing $50million into the virtual space, which will be accessible through virtual reality glasses. It could take 15 years to develop.

Chakrabarti’s guess of Meta, however, appears to have legs.

Bloomberg reported that Facebook appears to own Meta.com, for instance.

“The web address meta.com currently redirects to meta.org, the home of a biomedical research discovery tool developed under the stewardship of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, which is co-founded by the Facebook CEO,” the site said.

A WHOLE NEW WORLD

The concept of the metaverse is quickly becoming a buzzword in technology and business.

It generally refers to shared virtual world environments which people can access via the internet.

The term can refer to digital spaces which are made more lifelike by the use of virtual reality (VR) or augmented reality (AR).

Some people also use the word metaverse to describe gaming worlds, in which users have a character that can walk around and interact with other players.

There is also a specific type of metaverse which uses blockchain technology. In these, users can buy virtual land and other digital assets using cryptocurrencies.

Many science fiction books and films are set in fully-fledged metaverses – alternative digital worlds which are indistinguishable from the real physical world. But this is still the stuff of fiction.

Currently, most virtual spaces look more like the inside of a video game than real life.

UNDER FIRE

It’s been a tricky few weeks for Facebook.

The company was hit on October 4 by a huge outage that knocked its services, including WhatsApp and Instagram, offline for seven hours.

As if that wasn’t enough, its suite of platforms went down yet again four days later. The faults were blamed on technological errors.

The outages rekindled calls from politicians and lawmakers to break up the California tech company.

Critics have argued for years that no single company should own three of the world’s most popular communications platforms.

The downtime followed weeks of drip-fed leaks and revelations by a former Facebook staff member published by the Wall Street Journal.

Frances Haugen provided documents used in a WSJ investigation and a Senate hearing on Instagram’s harm to teenage girls.

Haugen, a former product manager at the company, will give evidence to the UK Parliament’s Joint Committee on the draft Online Safety Bill on Monday 25 October.

This follows her testimony to the US Congress on 5 October.

It will be the first public evidence she has given in Europe regarding her experiences at the company and her ideas to regulate social media.

Facebook has said that Haugen’s stories of her time at Facebook contain inconsistencies and falsehoods.

AFPExperts speculate that the rebrand could see the company renamed to ‘Horizon’ or ‘Meta’ to reflect its ambitions to build a metaverse[/caption]

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