Manon, 17, has a Facebook account, but to connect with her friends she turns to other social networks such as Instagram and Snapchat.
“I don’t use it to post status updates or personal information,” the San Francisco teen said.
Manon maintains her Facebook account to be able to stay in touch with the large number of users on the huge social network and as a “gateway” to log into other apps.
“But to communicate with my friends, it’s Snapchat,” the high schooler said. “Everyone says Facebook is out of date. I think it’s because all the parents are on Facebook.”
As Facebook has grown into a network of more than 2 billion people globally it has lost its luster for younger users who made up a core base.
While Facebook has become one of the world’s most valuable and powerful companies, it is no longer seen as a cool destination for teens, who are turning to Snapchat and Instagram, which is owned by Facebook.
According to a Pew Research Center survey this year, 51 percent of US teens ages 13 to 17 use Facebook, compared with 72 percent for Instagram and 69 percent who are on Snapchat. The survey found 85 percent used YouTube.
The landscape has shifted since a 2014-2015 Pew survey, which found Facebook leading other social networks with 71 percent of the teen segment.
“The social media environment among teens is quite different from what it was just three years ago,” Pew researcher Monica Anderson said. “Back then, teens’ social media use mostly revolved around Facebook. Today, their habits revolve less around a single platform.”
The breakup of teens and Facebook was occurring before the latest scandals, which have hit Facebook over hijacked user data and propagation of misinformation.
Thirty-four percent of US online youth view Facebook “as a Web site for old people and parents,” according to a Forrester Research survey.
“US online youth regard Facebook as utility, while other networks that deliver niche value steal attention from Facebook’s broad platform,” Forrester’s Anjali Lai said in a research note. “Established social networks face an image problem.”
A separate report by the research firm eMarketer came to a similar conclusion, estimating that Facebook would lose about 2 million US users under age 24 this year.
Facebook remains king of the social media space and is still growing, though more slowly than in past years.
Its profit in the first quarter of this year jumped 63 percent from a year earlier to US$5 billion, and total revenues increased 49 percent to US$11.97 billion.
The California-based company has been moving to become more diversified, with its “family” of apps, which include Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp, and virtual-reality gear from its Oculus division.
To connect with younger audiences, Facebook has launched a parentally controlled Messenger Kids app for those too young to have their own Facebook account, and has expanded that to Peru and Canada.
Facebook is also moving to challenge YouTube, and potentially other services such as Netflix, with original video on its own platform and on Instagram, which has 1 billion users.
With 2.2 billion users, Facebook still has a big lead over Snapchat, with 191 million users at the end of March, and Twitter with 336 million.
“Snapchat has a lot of growing to do before it can really be a huge challenger to Facebook,” eMarketer social media analyst Debra Williamson said.
However, the trends show services like Instagram and Snapchat — which has grown beyond its original offering of disappearing messages — have become the new, cool place for young smartphone users.
With Snapchat, “you can add animation, special effects, that’s what’s interesting for my generation,” said 16-year-old Charlotte, another San Francisco high-school student.
Manon said she also likes Instagram, because it is “more about creativity, people who make music or photography can post what they do.”
AFGHAN CHILD: A court battle is ongoing over if the toddler can stay with Joshua Mast and his wife, who wanted ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ for her Major Joshua Mast, a US Marine whose adoption of an Afghan war orphan has spurred a years-long legal battle, is to remain on active duty after a three-member panel of Marines on Tuesday found that while he acted in a way unbecoming of an officer to bring home the baby girl, it did not warrant his separation from the military. Lawyers for the Marine Corps argued that Mast abused his position, disregarded orders of his superiors, mishandled classified information and improperly used a government computer in his fight over the child who was found orphaned on the battlefield in rural Afghanistan
Millions of dollars have poured into bets on who will win the US presidential election after a last-minute court ruling opened up gambling on the vote, upping the stakes on a too-close-to-call race between US Vice President Kamala Harris and former US president Donald Trump that has already put voters on edge. Contracts for a Harris victory were trading between 48 and 50 percent in favor of the Democrat on Friday on Interactive Brokers, a firm that has taken advantage of a legal opening created earlier this month in the country’s long running regulatory battle over election markets. With just a month
US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris is in “excellent health” and fit for the presidency, according to a medical report published by the White House on Saturday as she challenged her rival, former US president Donald Trump, to publish his own health records. “Vice President Harris remains in excellent health,” her physician Joshua Simmons said in the report, adding that she “possesses the physical and mental resiliency required to successfully execute the duties of the presidency.” Speaking to reporters ahead of a trip to North Carolina, Harris called Trump’s unwillingness to publish his records “a further example
RUSSIAN INPUT: Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov called Washington’s actions in Asia ‘destructive,’ accusing it of being the reason for the ‘militarization’ of Japan The US is concerned about China’s “increasingly dangerous and unlawful” activities in the disputed South China Sea, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told ASEAN leaders yesterday during an annual summit, and pledged that Washington would continue to uphold freedom of navigation in the region. The 10-member ASEAN meeting with Blinken followed a series of confrontations at sea between China and ASEAN members Philippines and Vietnam. “We are very concerned about China’s increasingly dangerous and unlawful activities in the South China Sea which have injured people, harm vessels from ASEAN nations and contradict commitments to peaceful resolutions of disputes,” said Blinken, who