Meta nudges its big VR push another step away from the Facebook legacy

Meta nudges its big VR push another step away from the Facebook legacy


Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Facebook Inc., speaks during the virtual Facebook Connect event, where the company announced its rebranding as Meta, in New York, U.S., on Thursday, Oct. 28, 2021.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Meta is introducing a new way for people to log in to virtual reality headsets without using their Facebook credentials, the company’s latest effort to separate its futuristic metaverse ambitions from its core social media business.

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of the company now known as Meta, announced in a blog post on Thursday that Meta accounts will debut in August. Users will be able to access their Meta Quest VR headsets with their new accounts and to see a history of their VR app purchases, Zuckerberg wrote.

While Meta still gets substantially all of its revenue from its Facebook family of apps, Zuckerberg is trying to convince investors and a certain subset of customers that the business is headed in a different direction as the metaverse evolves.

Zuckerberg’s vision of the metaverse involves an assortment of virtual worlds that can be accessed by VR and augmented reality technologies. Although VR and AR headsets are still niche devices in a world dominated by smartphones, the Facebook founder has indicated they represent the future of computing and he recently said he envisions 1 billion users spending hundreds of dollars each in the metaverse by the second half of the decade.

The story looks wildly different today, however. Reality Labs, Meta’s division responsible for developing the metaverse and its underlying technologies, posted a $10 billion loss in 2021.

Meta also is trying to make amends with its current customer base of Quest VR users after the company previously required them to use their Facebook accounts to access headsets. The backlash resulted in Meta announcing in October that it would change course.

“When we announced that we would start requiring people to log into Meta Quest using a Facebook account, we received a lot of feedback from the Quest community,” Zuckerberg said in Thursday’s blog post. “We took that feedback into account as we designed a new Meta account structure that gives people flexibility and control.”

Along with abandoning the need to use Facebook credentials, Meta is making a marketing change to further showcase the brand. Rather than users having Oculus profiles, they will now have Meta Horizon profiles. Facebook inherited the name when it acquired Oculus in 2014 as an entry into the VR market. Now people will be able to use their Meta Horizon profiles to customize their VR usernames, virtual avatars and other information, Zuckerberg said.

A Meta spokesperson told CNBC that users will need both a Meta account and a Meta Horizon profile to access the company’s VR headsets.

Zuckerberg also noted that Quest VR users will have “followers” instead of “friends,” making the Quest nomenclature more akin to Instagram.

“If you already own a Meta VR headset, your Oculus friends will automatically become your followers and you’ll follow them back by default,” he said. “You can choose to unfollow anyone or remove followers at any time.”

Meta also is releasing new tools to let users manage their privacy settings in VR, allowing them to choose whether they want their Meta Horizon profiles to be open to everyone, only to friends and family or to be kept private.

If users don’t select a privacy setting, they will be set to friends and family by default, a spokesperson said. Current Quest VR users will need to select a privacy setting in order to continue using their headsets.

WATCH: What is the metaverse and why are billions of dollars being spent on it?



Source

Roomba’s bankruptcy may wreck a lot more than one robot vacuum maker
Technology

Roomba’s bankruptcy may wreck a lot more than one robot vacuum maker

Medianews Group/boston Herald Via Getty Images | Medianews Group | Getty Images Los Angeles resident Ruth Horne, 76, enticed by a bargain, bought what she thought was a Roomba to vacuum her house, but the experience ended in frustration. “It kept getting stuck somewhere and would then just go around in circles,” Horne said. She […]

Read More
Lucid’s big SUV arrives with high expectations, and big risks
Technology

Lucid’s big SUV arrives with high expectations, and big risks

Lucid Motors gets rave reviews from critics. But it’s sorely lacking customers. That’s a problem the company can’t afford. The Arizona-based EV maker has top-shelf tech, deep-pocketed backers, and highly praised cars. However, it has struggled to meet production targets, and has been unable to steal the spotlight away from established luxury brands with century-old […]

Read More
Former Trump advisor Dina Powell McCormick leaves Meta board after eight-month stint
Technology

Former Trump advisor Dina Powell McCormick leaves Meta board after eight-month stint

Dina Powell McCormick, who was a member of President Donald Trump’s first administration, has resigned from Meta’s board of directors. Powell McCormick, who previously spent 16 years working at Goldman Sachs, notified Meta of her resignation on Friday, according to a filing with the SEC. The filing did not disclose why McCormick was stepping down from […]

Read More