this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2025
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[–] Gullible@sh.itjust.works 25 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (6 children)

Considering the unrelenting data snatching capacity of the desktop app, there are only 3 plausible reasons Facebook, a company so maliciously money hungry that it might just prove the absence of god, would choose to deprecate it

1: something is fundamentally wrong with the app and they feel they are liable for greater damages than their potential profits

2: they’ve improved their data collection on browsers to the point that both methods are equally profitable

3: they don’t believe they need the money. (This one sincerely terrified me)

[–] dan@upvote.au 7 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I don't have any knowledge about this in particular, but as someone with experience working at big tech companies, you're missing the most likely reason:

  1. Everyone who worked on it was reorged to higher priority teams, and nobody is left to maintain the apps

A lot of teams are only 3-6 developers, an engineering manager, a project manager, and a designer. Other roles like content design and QA are often shared across lots of teams. Developers with experience building native apps might be needed on other projects.

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