Meta CEO Zuckerberg considered spinning off Instagram in 2018 over
antitrust worries, email says
[April 16, 2025] By
BRIAN WITTE
WASHINGTON (AP) — Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg once considered separating
Instagram from its parent company due to worries about antitrust
litigation, according to an email shown Tuesday on the second day of an
antitrust trial alleging Meta illegally monopolized the social media
market.
In the 2018 email, Zuckerberg wrote that he was beginning to wonder if
“spinning Instagram out” would be the only way to accomplish important
goals, as big-tech companies grow. He also noted “there is a non-trivial
chance” Meta could be forced to spin out Instagram and perhaps WhatsApp
in five to 10 years anyway.
He wrote that while most companies resist breakups, “the corporate
history is that most companies actually perform better after they've
been split up.”
Asked Tuesday by attorney Daniel Matheson, who is leading the antitrust
case for the Federal Trade Commission, which incidence in corporate
history he had in mind, Zuckerberg responded: “I'm not sure what I had
in mind then.”
Zuckerberg, who was the first witness, testified for more than seven
hours over two days in the trial that could force Meta to break off
Instagram and WhatsApp, startups the tech giant bought more than a
decade ago that have since grown into social media powerhouses.
While questioning Zuckerberg on Tuesday morning, Matheson noted that he
had referred to Instagram as being a “rapidly growing, threatening,
network.” The attorney also pointed out Zuckerberg's referring to trying
to neutralize a competitor by buying the company.

But Zuckerberg said while Matheson was able to show documents in court
that indicated his concern about Instagram's growth, he also had many
conversations about how excited his company was to acquire Instagram to
make a better product.
Zuckerberg also said Facebook was in the process of building a camera
app for sharing on mobile phones, and he thought Instagram was better at
that, “so I wanted to buy them.”
Zuckerberg also pushed back against Matheson's contention that the
reason for buying the company was to neutralize a threat.
“I think that that mischaracterizes what the email was," Zuckerberg
said.
In his questioning of Zuckerberg, Matheson repeatedly brought up emails
— many of them more than a decade old — written by Zuckerberg and his
associates before and after the acquisition of Instagram.
While acknowledging the documents, Zuckerberg has often sought to
downplay the contents, saying he wrote them in the early stages of
considering the acquisition and that what he wrote at the time didn't
capture the full scope of his interest in the company.
Matheson also brought up a February 2012 message in which Zuckerberg
wrote to the former chief financial officer of Facebook that Instagram
and Path, a social networking app, already had created meaningful
networks that could be “very disruptive to us.”

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Mark Hansen, right, a lawyer for Meta, departs following the first
day of a historic antitrust trial about Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg
intentions in acquiring Instagram, at Barrett Prettyman United
States Court House in Washington, Monday, April 14, 2025. (AP
Photo/Nathan Howard)
 Zuckerberg testified that the
message was written in the context of a broad discussion about
whether they should buy companies to accelerate their own
developments.
Zuckerberg also testified that buying the company, taking it off the
market and building their own version of it was “a reasonable thing
to do.”
Later Tuesday, Mark Hansen, an attorney for Meta, began his
questioning of Zuckerberg. Hansen, in his opening statements Monday,
emphasized that Meta's services are free and that the company, far
from holding a monopoly, actually has a lot of competition. He made
a point of bringing up those issues in just over an hour of
questioning Zuckerberg, with more expected to come Wednesday.
“It's very competitive,” Zuckerberg said, noting that charging for
using services like Facebook would likely drive users away, since
similar services are widely available elsewhere.
The trial is one of the first big tests of President Donald Trump’s
FTC’s ability to challenge Big Tech. The lawsuit was filed against
Meta — then called Facebook — in 2020, during Trump’s first term. It
claims the company bought Instagram and WhatsApp to squash
competition and establish an illegal monopoly in the social media
market.
Facebook bought Instagram — which was a photo-sharing app with no
ads — for $1 billion in 2012.
Instagram was the first company Facebook bought and kept running as
a separate app. Until then, Facebook was known for smaller
“acqui-hires” — a popular Silicon Valley deal in which a company
purchases a startup as a way to hire its talented workers, then
shuts the acquired company down. Two years later, it did it again
with the messaging app WhatsApp, which it purchased for $22 billion.

WhatsApp and Instagram helped Facebook move its business from
desktop computers to mobile devices, and to remain popular with
younger generations as rivals like Snapchat (which it also tried,
but failed, to buy) and TikTok emerged.
However, the FTC has a narrow definition of Meta’s competitive
market, excluding companies like TikTok, YouTube and Apple’s
messaging service from being considered rivals to Instagram and
WhatsApp.
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg is presiding over the case. Late
last year, he denied Meta’s request for a summary judgment and ruled
that the case must go to trial.
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