Will Facebook’s transformation be successful?

Image credit: FeedByMe

Meta is the new name for the company that used to be known as Facebook.

Because this is merely the name of the parent corporation, there will still be a Facebook, an Instagram, and all of the other familiar platforms.

The new name also invites visitors to join the company’s “next chapter,” a three-dimensional adventure into the metaverse, which it views as the internet’s future.

However, other observers question if the public will have enough faith in the company to participate in Mark Zuckerberg’s new vision.

According to researchers, the new name resulted in millions of online searches for the exact keyword Meta in the UK and US combined.

If you look up meta in the Oxford English Dictionary, you’ll find that it can mean “change, transformation, permutation, or substitution” or “above, above, at a higher level.”

The metaverse, according to business, will be the next step in the evolution of how we use the internet.

Some of this may be familiar to those who have spent the pandemic in video conference sessions, while others will be reminded of older virtual worlds like Second Life.

“Augmented reality glasses to stay present in the physical world, virtual reality to be fully immersed, and phones and computers to hop in from existing platforms,” Meta says.

Oculus, a maker of virtual reality headsets, is already owned by Meta.

Last year, the company also released beta versions of two metaverse projects: Horizon World, which allows friends to gather virtually, and Horizon Workrooms, which allows for virtual business meetings.

However, the metaverse is still a work in progress, with the business estimating that it will take another 10 to 15 years to fully realise the concept.

Will people trust the environment that Mr. Zuckerberg established to keep them secure and their data secret after all of the recent leaks and accusations?

Advertisers might target advertising based on “your body language, your physiological responses, and knowing who you are communicating with and how,” according to the Guardian.

Facebook stated that it has no commercial or moral incentive to do anything other than provide the best possible experience to the greatest number of people.

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