Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Business
  4. News

Facebook use has already dropped 50 million hours — but no biggie, it says

Add as a preferred source on Google

Users worldwide are spending around 50 million hours less time on Facebook every day but the company isn’t exactly worried about the change. During the fourth quarter and 2017 year-end earnings report, Facebook said that time spent on the platform dropped five percent with just the first few changes for the company’s new goal to increase personal interactions and decrease public posts. The company’s financial outlook, however, doesn’t see the same level of drops with an increase in revenue from ads.

Only a handful of the changes toward CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s news feed shift made it into the platform before the end of 2017, including a change designed to prioritize videos that show more interactions rather than passive views. Despite not yet including data on Facebook’s news feed shifts since then that prioritize posts from friends, Zuckerberg estimated time spent on the social network dropped five percent in the last quarter.

Recommended Videos

Facebook continued to show higher user numbers worldwide, but growth wasn’t as accelerated as the company’s usual data. Compared to 2016, daily active users grew by 14 percent to 1.40 billion. The company’s quarterly growth, however, sat at a 2.18 percent increase over the previous quarter, the slowest quarterly growth Facebook has reported yet. In the U.S. and Canada, the number of daily active users actually decreased by 700,000 in the last quarter.

The shift, however, doesn’t come as a surprise to the company. When Zuckerberg announced plans to shift toward more meaningful interactions just with those video changes introduced last year, he said at the time that engagement and time spent would likely go down.

“News and video will always be an important part of Facebook,” Zuckerberg said. “But when people are spending so much time passively consuming public content that it starts taking away from the time people are connecting with each other, that’s not good. So let me be clear: Helping people connect is more important than maximizing the time they spend on Facebook.”

So why isn’t Facebook worried about the decrease? Outside of the leadership’s staff insistence that the change is better for the platform in the long haul, the company’s advertising revenue was 47 percent higher than the same quarter in 2016 and the overall report exceeded Wall Street’s expectations.

Zuckerberg says that user interaction is more valuable than the actual amount of time spent on the platform, explaining that users are more willing to see ads when reading something they care about when compared to passively watching a viral video.

“But even in the short term, all time spent on Facebook is not equal,” Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg said. “Because when people spend more time viewing posts, because they’re interacting with family and friends, and they’re not involved in longer posts, we actually have more monetization opportunities. We’re not doing this to be positive or negative for revenue, we’re doing it because it’s the right thing for our community. But the impact it has on monetization is certainly not clearly negative.”

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
The best life advice I ever followed was deleting Instagram, and it soothed my frustrated soul
Instagram

I won’t lie, I got addicted to Instagram. And for a long time, I didn’t even realize how much it was messing with my head. It sounds dramatic when you say it out loud, but it really crept up on me. I got so used to watching Instagram reels all the time that my brain just stopped having patience for anything longer. A full YouTube video felt like a commitment, and reading something without checking my phone in between felt impossible. And the worst part was, I knew exactly why it was happening.

I tried fixing it the usual ways — set app timers, try apps that stop you from doomscrolling, and tell myself I’d cut down. Some days it worked, most days it didn’t. I’d still find myself opening Instagram without even thinking about it. So one day, I stopped trying to control it and just deleted the app from my iPhone. And honestly, that one small decision did more for me than everything else I had tried.

Read more
Internet’s favorite app Vine is back from the dead, and it’s called Divine
The six-second videos that launched a thousand creators are back, and this time, they're here to stay.
Divine app open on iPhone

Vine is back, and if you're already feeling nostalgic, you're not alone. Divine, a Vine reboot backed by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, is now available on the App Store and Google Play. The app brings back roughly 500,000 archived Vine videos and lets creators post new six-second looping videos once again.

As reported by TechCrunch, Dorsey's nonprofit, "and Other Stuff," financed the project. He's not looking for a return on his investment here. His goal is simpler: to undo the mistake he made when he shut down Vine back in 2017.

Read more
Social media scams caused over two billion dollars in losses to consumers last year
Facebook scams led consumer losses as social media fraud surged in 2025
cyberscam-romance-scam

Social media is now America's most expensive scam hotspot. According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), consumers reported $2.1 billion in losses from platform-based fraud in 2025, a number that has grown eightfold in five years. Nearly one in three fraud victims said the con started on a social platform.

Why is Facebook such a big target?

Read more