😁

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      1 year ago

      For comparison, if you made $365,000 per year this would be the same as you paying 7 cents per day in a fine, or $25 per year.

      If a fine is less than the profit it is legal and the cost of doing business.

      • @[email protected]
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        201 year ago

        Exactly right. Facebook will factor this in as am expected cost of doing business (if they didn’t already) and their stock will go up. This isn’t a penalty, this is just like paying a bribe. In the end, both are just lining the pockets of officials more interested in appearing to do something for the next news cycle so they can get re-elected.

      • Ech
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        61 year ago

        Did you mean $365,000,000? Or did you get confused by the “.”? Cause that’s used as a comma for numbers in a lot of European countries, so it’s $100k per day, not $100.

        Also, it’d be exactly 10 cents per day, since $365k per year would be $1k per day, which 100 is 10% of.

        • @walrusintraining
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          81 year ago

          No, they meant 100k is 0.0071428571429% of 1.4b, and 26 is the same percent of 365k. Basically, if you made 365k a year and had an equal percentage fine, it would come out to less than 7 cents per day.

    • riccardo
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      1 year ago

      From the article:

      $100,000 per day for a country with ~5.4 million people is a lot. If even 20 percent used Facebook regularly, then that would still be 10 cents per user per day. It’s unlikely that Meta is generating so much profit per user - every day.

      This is a reasonable observation and I wonder what Meta would do once one of their services becomes unprofitable in a specific country. Anyway if you add Instagram and WhatsApp to the math, maybe they would still generate profits from the Norwegian userbase

    • @[email protected]
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      481 year ago

      I don’t know where you’re getting that number but it’s definitely wrong. Their most profitable year so far was 2021, and they made $39.4 billion for the entire year. Source

      • Ech
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        71 year ago

        So assuming things haven’t changed too much for them, this is about 1%. Barely noticeable.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          I mean, I want them to pay as much as possible, but 1% of their global revenue, for just a small country like Norway, still seems pretty decent.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          No, it’s 0.1%. But Norway could be less than 1% of their market, so it’s somewhat significant.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      I think the 2 points the article makes about that are pretty valid though. It’s most probably more than Facebook’s revenue in this single country plus it’s just the beginning.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      But I really hope this sets a precedent for all other countries, need money to finance something? Just tax the shit out of Facebook. Of course it’s a joke, we should properly tax them in the first place, or better yet force them not to exploit people data for profit

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Where are you getting that number? Their financial reports claim about 120 billion a year in revenue. Or 0.4 billion per day.

      That’s for about 3.5 billion users. Let’s say Norwegians, being quite rich, generate ten times the daily average, or about $1 per day. I don’t know how accurate it is, but this page claims about 80% of Norwegians use Facebook. With 5.5 million people, that would put their daily revenue for Norway at about 4 million. So this fine would equate to about 2.5% of their revenue. With a net profit of about 25% (it has varied from 20-30 the last few years) that’s about 10% of their profits.

      It’s not exactly going to put them out of business, but it doesn’t seem too bad, proportionally, even with the numbers as generous as possible to your case. If India did the same (just adjusting 100k for population size) it’d be 25 million a day, or ten billion a year.

      • Echo Dot
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        01 year ago

        Hope he didn’t write $100 Americans just refuse to acknowledge the existence of other cultures and can’t be bothered to try to learn to understand them.

        The presence of multiple zeros after the decimal point is the big clue you know.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          Not really.

          Norway has 5,391,369 people, and assuming ~40% use facebook, that’s 2 million people that use facebook. 36.5 million dollars per year of fines mean that it’s 18 dollars per user per year.

          Facebook has 2 billion users worldwide, and has a revenue of 33 billion every year. If all of those 2 billion users fined facebook for 18 dollars per year, that’s their whole revenue gone.

          It just doesn’t have that much effect right now because it’s only norway doing it.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              With only one country doing this, they can soak the cost, but the ARPU (average revenue per user) of Facebook, or any social media site, is actually quite low. It literally costs them money to operate in the country now.

              The question becomes “How many other countries can do the same before we are forced to care?”

              Fun Fact: Reddit had the lowest ARPU of any major social media.

              • @[email protected]
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                111 months ago

                The average revenue varies wildly with how rich the user is, though. It’s much more profitable to market to Norwegians than Indians given they have vastly higher spending power.