Madhavi Tumkur
Jul 21, 2010

Facebook reaches 500 million user milestone today

GLOBAL - Facebook sets a significant milestone by passing 500 million users today. The population is now a sum total of the population of the US, Japan and Germany combined.

Facebook reaches 500 million milestone
Facebook reaches 500 million milestone

This announcement means that 7.4% of the estimated 6.79 billion world population is now signed up to the site.

It has taken only five months to add the last 100 million users, while the first 100 million took it almost five years

Seventy per cent of users are outside the US, particularly from the developing countries, and one-quarter of all users are logging in and updating their pages from their mobile phones. 

Facebook has captured the attention of federal regulators and lawmakers who are struggling to protect consumers and their privacy. The privately held company still thinks of itself as a startup and claims that it is learning how to handle the new responsibilities of its half billion netizens. 

Looking at its speed of growth, a billion users is possible, especially if the company's focus on low-penetration countries like Russia, South Korea and Japan work out (it is banned in China). Facebook says that it is localising apps and services for those places, and encouraging third-party developers to do the same.

Arun Kumar, head of digital for Asia-Pacific at Mediabrands Singapore, believes that given the fact that Facebook is growing in countries with large populations, it is only a matter of time before the social media company reaches its one billion user milestone. 

Responding to the security settings and consumer privacy, Kumar says: "Facebook has been responding to these concerns and has changed its privacy settings on a number of occasions, so much that users can't keep track of it any more. I think this is going to be a continuous dialogue but remember, Facebook only puts data which users want to share. So some amount of onus does lie with the users too." 

Going forwards, Kumar believes that Facebook must launch location-based services. "Most users access Facebook through their mobile devices and this promises to be a huge opportunity to its user base. Foursquare has already taken a lead in this direction and even though its user base is not too large, Facebook must invent ways to counter its popularity."

 

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

US adtech CEO jailed for financial fraud after ...

Kubient’s fraud case serves as a warning to adtech executives to strengthen oversight, transparency, and ensure ethical business practices.

1 day ago

'Reputations will be made and lost': Heathrow ...

When Europe’s busiest airport, Heathrow, unexpectedly shut down on Friday, its crisis comms team bore the brunt.

1 day ago

Are religious factors enough to shift Indonesian ...

Muslim consumers' preference for brands that are in line with their beliefs is increasingly becoming a trend. However, this trend is considered not to make brands become market leaders as long as quality, service, and promotion are not improved.

1 day ago

Musk’s X battles India in court while advertisers ...

The social media platform challenged India’s content-blocking rules as advertisers still continue to adopt a wait-and-watch approach in the country and globally.