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Follow Us [Get the newsletter]( Hey all, itâs Kurt. Facebook Inc. is starting 2021 in much the same way it spent the majority of 2020: embroiled in controversy. While Facebook has so far avoided any known major issues with the U.S. election, the company was criticized for its part in enabling a deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Organizers of the riot used Facebook services, [BuzzFeed]( reported, and prominent venture capitalist Chris Sacca [tweeted]( at Zuckerberg on the day of the riots that heâs âgot blood on [his] hands.â Just donât tell Facebookâs investors. When the company reports earnings on Wednesday afternoon, Wall Street analysts are expecting great news. With a global pandemic forcing people indoors, Facebookâs advertising business stands to benefit from the shift toward online shopping. Revenue is expected to be up 25% for the quarter, compared to 22% growth in the previous quarter and just 11% in the one before that. The stock is up almost 8% since Election Day. This has been the Facebook story for years. Through privacy blunders, election issues and failures to police its own platform, Facebookâs business has simply plugged away, seemingly unimpeded. It appears there is nothing that can stop what is arguably the worldâs most important advertising platform. The gap between Facebookâs public reputation and its financial success has never been greater. But there are real risks ahead for the company in 2021. Facebook has been [sued by the Federal Trade Commission]( and the vast majority of U.S. states for anti-competitive behavior. Itâs possible this kind of lawsuit will take its toll on the company, which has historically prided itself on moving quickly and making strategic acquisitions, moves that have built a moat around its business. Antitrust lawsuits can take years, of course, but itâs possible Facebook starts to feel the effects sooner than that. A more complicated threat looms in the prospect of Section 230 reform. Legislators on both sides of the aisle believe that the law, which protects platforms like Facebook from legal liability for user content, needs to change. Facebook, Twitter Inc., Snap Inc. and YouTube all banned or suspended a sitting U.S. president this month. It was the greatest example yet of the power tech companies have to police user speech, and it could trigger further government action to curb that influence by scaling back tech's legal shield. The moves subjected Facebook and other social media to allegations of that they're suppressing conservative voices, and some users have threatened to leave the platform. It's not clear if Congress will act. But if the U.S. does change or take away Section 230 protections, it could change internet speech forever, and upend the global user feed that Facebook has established. Itâs possible that when Trump finally crossed the line, he also forced social media companies to make a move that would come back to hurt their businesses. Facebook's list of challenges for the coming year is as long as it's ever been. Then again, weâve been here before. There are a lot of reasons to critique the company and its Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg. But for investors, the business's resilience in the face of criticism isn't one of them. â[Kurt Wagner](mailto:kwagner71@bloomberg.net) If you read one thing Inside one woman's quest to open up Clubhouse, the tech set's favorite insidery chat app, [to reporters](. Paid Post The worldâs most trusted organizations partner with [Crowdstrike]( to stop data breaches. We stop. So you can go. [Crowdstrike]( secures the data and infrastructure that keeps the world running. Thatâs why weâre a trusted partner of the worldâs most important organizations. We stop. So you can go. Crowdstrike And hereâs what you need to know in global technology news A surge in internet traffic triggered [widespread outages]( on the East Coast on Tuesday, foiling home-bound workers. Twitter bought a [newsletter startup](. Techies are pushing to recall California's governor. Chamath Palihapitiya [wants his job](. YouTube suspended Rudy Giuliani's ability to make money from [ads on his videos]( for 30 days over election lies. Microsoft's sales jumped 17% for the quarter, buoyed by [demand for cloud services](. Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are [in a tiff]( over fleets of satellites. You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Fully Charged newsletter.
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