
How does one turn $400 million into a cool $50 million in just 3 short years? By
On Tuesday, the stock photo company Shutterstock
GIPHY has sort of quietly ingrained itself into numerous platforms over the years, powering many social networks’ GIF search engine features. According to Shutterstock, GIPHY sees around 1.3 billion search queries every day and “powers more than 15 billion daily media impressions.”
So, why did Meta sell GIPHY and take a hit of hundreds of millions dollars? Well, to be fair to Meta, it wasn’t exactly the company’s choice. Meta was forced to sell off the GIF search engine due to antitrust laws in the UK.
Back in 2021, UK’s antitrust regulator Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)
But, Meta isn’t completely cutting its ties with GIPHY. According to Shutterstock, as part of the acquisition deal, Meta has entered into an “API agreement” with the stock photo company in order to keep using GIPHY to power its platforms’ GIF searches.
So, don’t fret Facebook users who love dropping GIFs. Nothing changes for you. At least, for now.