Facebook
has been quietly working for more than two years on a project that is
vital to expanding its base of 1.1 billion users: getting the social
network onto the billions of cheap, simple “feature phones” that have
largely disappeared in America and Europe but are still the norm in
developing countries like India and Brazil.
Facebook soon
plans to announce the first results of the initiative, which it calls
Facebook for Every Phone: More than 100 million people, or roughly one
out of eight of its mobile users worldwide, now regularly access the
social network from more than 3,000 different models of feature phones,
some costing as little as $20.
Many of those
users, who rank among the world’s poorest people, pay little or nothing
to download their Facebook news feeds and photos, with the data usage
subsidized by phone carriers and manufacturers.
Facebook has only
just begun to sell ads to these customers, so it makes no money from
them yet. But the countries in which the simple phone software is doing
the best — India, Indonesia, Mexico, Brazil and Vietnam — are among the
fastest-growing markets for use of the Internet and social networks,
according to the research firm eMarketer.
Like many other
giants of the technology industry, Facebook is struggling with the
seismic shift of its customers away from computers to mobile devices and
the erosion of profit that can bring.
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