Facebook is changing. The company has seen a tumultuous period of controversy in recent months, as it faces a tide of whistleblowers and questions about its role in the spread of misinformation online. However, today marked Facebook Connect, a livestream highlighting the company's consumer-facing future. As part of Facebook Connect 2021, CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed the new name of the social media giant's parent company. Facebook is officially rebranding as Meta.
To be clear, this doesn't mean that the name of the social media platform Facebook is changing, rather it's the company at large. According to Zuckerberg, the company's name was too closely associated with just the Facebook social media platform, which is no longer representative of everything that the company does. Rather, the name is meant to be evocative of the metaverse, where users will be able to connect in similar ways to those depicted in Ready Player One.
Zuckerberg's point about Facebook outgrowing its name is correct, criticisms of the company aside. Facebook is no longer defined solely by the social media platform, as it now has its hands in gaming and home automation hardware, business technology, and more. The Meta name is an indicator of where the company is headed, regardless of whether or not the endgame is what people will ultimately be interested in.
Realistically, the metaverse concept may never truly be feasible, at least not in the sense that certain companies are hoping for. Something like Ready Player One, which seems to be something of a framework for the metaverse concept that Facebook is pursuing, would require an unrealistic number of companies and licensing agreements to work out in the long term. It's a distinctly sci-fi concept, and one that is admittedly interesting, though highly unrealistic given real-world constraints.
There's also the question of whether or not Meta will have the consumer confidence necessary to usher in such a concept on a large scale. Facebook's reputation has soured in recent years, and it shows no signs of improving. The company is under a lot of scrutiny in general right now, and the name change likely won't be enough to distract from that.
However, it appears that the change is now set in stone. The future of Meta isn't entirely clear, and the departure from the Facebook name may take some getting used to, but the company should be given at least some credit for its ambitions. Those ambitions won't outweigh the controversy for many users, though.