At US antitrust trial, Meta’s Zuckerberg admits he bought Instagram because it was ‘better’

Published April 15, 2025
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to the E. Barrett Prettyman United States Court House in Washington, DC, US, April 15. — AFP
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to the E. Barrett Prettyman United States Court House in Washington, DC, US, April 15. — AFP

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg made a key concession at a US antitrust trial on Tuesday, saying he bought Instagram because it had a “better” camera than the one his company was trying to build for flagship app Facebook at the time.

The acknowledgement appeared to bolster allegations by US antitrust enforcers that Meta had used a “buy or bury” strategy to snap up potential rivals, keep smaller competitors at bay and maintain an illegal monopoly.

It came during Zuckerberg’s second day testifying at the high-stakes trial in Washington, in which the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is seeking to unwind Meta’s acquisitions of prized assets Instagram and WhatsApp.

The case, filed during President Donald Trump’s first term, is widely seen as a test of the new Trump administration’s promises to take on Big Tech companies.

Asked by an attorney for the FTC whether he thought fast-growing Instagram could be destructive to Meta, then known as Facebook, Zuckerberg said he believed Instagram had a better camera product than Facebook was building.

“We were doing a build vs. buy analysis” while in the process of building a camera app, Zuckerberg said. “I thought that Instagram was better at that, so I thought it was better to buy them.”

Zuckerberg also acknowledged that many of the company’s attempts at building its own apps had failed.

‘Building a new app is hard’

“Building a new app is hard and many more times than not when we have tried to build a new app it hasn’t gotten a lot of traction,” Zuckerberg told the court.

“We probably tried building dozens of apps over the history of the company and the majority of them don’t go anywhere,” he said.

Zuckerberg’s testimony comes as Meta is defending itself years after the release of damning statements plucked from Facebook’s own documents, like a 2008 email in which he said: “It is better to buy than compete.”

The company argues that his past intentions are irrelevant because the FTC has defined the social media market inaccurately and failed to account for the stiff competition Meta has faced from ByteDance’s TikTok, Alphabet’s YouTube and Apple’s messaging app.

The FTC accuses Meta of holding a monopoly on platforms used to share content with friends and family, where its main competitors in the United States are Snap’s Snapchat and MeWe, a tiny privacy-focused social media app launched in 2016.

Platforms where users broadcast content to strangers based on shared interests, such as X, TikTok, YouTube and Reddit are not interchangeable, the FTC argues.

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