Monday, April 6, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Tiktok 'Poaching' Facebook Employees Right In Its Backyard

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Oct, 2019 09:16 PM

    Chinese short-video making platform TikTok is reportedly poaching Facebook employees and has moved into an office space in Mountain View, California that used to be frequented by WhatsApp workers before it was acquired by the social networking giant in 2014.


    According to a CNBC report, TikTok and its parent company ByteDance have also posted several job postings in the San Francisco Bay Area, according to LinkedIn.


    "Since 2018, the company has hired more than two dozen employees from Facebook," the report said.


    The new location gives TikTok a strategic presence as it is just a few blocks away from Facebook's Menlo Park headquarters and employees can just walk-in for jobs.


    Earlier this month, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg admitted that TikTok is doing well in the US and growing quickly in India, unveiling his own plans to counter the rising clout of the Chinese short video-sharing platform in meetings with employees.


    Saying that Facebook has a "number of approaches" to compete with TikTok, Zuckerberg said the company would first test the efficacy of its strategies in markets where TikTok is not already big, according to the details of the meeting published by The Verge.


    With over 200 million users in India, TikTok, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, is fast closing the gap with Facebook in the country.


    "We have a number of approaches that we're going to take towards this, and we have a product called Lasso that's a standalone app that we're working on, trying to get product-market fit in countries like Mexico, is I think one of the first initial ones," Zuckerberg was quoted as saying.


    In November last year, Facebook quietly released a stand-alone app called "Lasso" to compete with TikTok.


    ByteDance claims it has over 700 million daily active users globally. Facebook has more than 2.1 billion people that use one of its apps daily, including Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp.


    According to the Facebook CEO, TikTok is almost like Instagram's Explore Tab.


    "I kind of think about TikTok as if it were Explore for stories, and that were the whole app," Zuckerberg said.


    "We're taking a number of approaches with Instagram, including making it so that Explore is more focused on stories, which is increasingly becoming the primary way that people consume content on Instagram, as well as a couple of other things there," he said.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    How does nature's strongest glue stick?

    How does nature's strongest glue stick?
    Barnacles produce the strongest glue or cement found in nature. The material is better than anything we have developed synthetically and sticks to any surface, even underwater...

    How does nature's strongest glue stick?

    Oceans vital for alien life on other planets

    Oceans vital for alien life on other planets
    Oceans have an immense capacity to control climate and they are vital in sustaining life even in case there is any on other planets, says a study....

    Oceans vital for alien life on other planets

    Sniffer laser for hard-to-detect explosives

    Sniffer laser for hard-to-detect explosives
    There's bad news for bomb-sniffing dogs: researchers have found a way to increase the sensitivity of a light-based sensor to detect incredibly minute amounts of explosives....

    Sniffer laser for hard-to-detect explosives

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing
    On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the moon....

    NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper
    In what could solve the commercial problems associated with clean-up of nuclear waste, researchers have successfully tested a material that can extract...

    New technology to make nuclear waste clean-up cheaper

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate
    Plant's productivity, that is the amount of biomass it produces, depends more on its size and age than temperature and precipitation as traditionally thought, says a study....

    Plant's biomass depends more on size, age than on climate