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posted by janrinok on Wednesday May 24 2023, @08:02AM   Printer-friendly

Shutterstock picks up Giphy for $53 million after UK blocks Meta's acquisition:

Shutterstock is buying Giphy for $53 million after Meta's acquisition of the popular GIF platform was blocked by the UK's competition regulator, the stock image giant has announced.

That price represents a steep discount compared to what Meta (then Facebook) reportedly agreed to pay for Giphy in 2020. At the time, Axios reported the deal was worth around $400 million, while The Guardian suggests closer to $315 million. Either way, a $53 million price tag is a bargain versus Giphy's peak valuation of around $600 million in 2016. As part of the deal, Meta will retain access to Giphy's library across its products.

Meta's acquisition of Giphy ran into trouble when the UK's competition regulator, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), ordered Facebook's parent company to unwind the deal in 2021. The CMA argued that the deal could harm competition by increasing Meta's market power, potentially allowing it to block its rival's access to GIFs or force them to hand over valuable user data in exchange for them. Although it appealed the ruling, Meta eventually agreed to sell Giphy last year.

For Shutterstock, the deal will augment its content library, expanding it to include GIFs and Stickers. The company also said it would help its "generative AI and metadata strategy." That's a bit more vague, but Shutterstock is currently using generative AI to provide imagery to its customers. Acquiring Giphy's substantial library could theoretically give Shutterstock reams of training data for future AI-based products.

"Through the Giphy acquisition, we are extending our audience touch points beyond primarily professional marketing and advertising use cases and expanding into casual conversations," Shutterstock CEO Paul Hennessy said in a statement. "We plan to leverage Shutterstock's unique capabilities in content and metadata monetization, generative AI, studio production and creative automation to enable the commercialization of our GIF library as we roll this offering out to customers."


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Wednesday May 24 2023, @10:36AM

    by Rosco P. Coltrane (4757) on Wednesday May 24 2023, @10:36AM (#1307868)

    Meta's acquisition of the popular GIF platform was blocked by the UK's competition regulator

    there is hope from old Europe. Yes I know, Brexit and all that. But it's still closer to Europe than to the insanity of America's extreme laissez-faire.

    It feels good when Facebook gets punched in the guts (FACEBOOK, not Meta). Losing a few hundred millions won't really hurt them, but ya know... a thousand cuts... There is hope.

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday May 24 2023, @11:58AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday May 24 2023, @11:58AM (#1307883) Journal

    Facebook thought it was worth 300 million plus, to help complete their control of the market. But, if it doesn't help to establish a monopoly, what is it really worth? Mehh - obviously not nearly that much.

    Oh yeah, it's in the nature of things that when a business goes bust, it's not worth a lot. Any small business owner who has gone bust can tell you that. They might pour millions into their business, but if it fails, they're lucky to get tens of thousands. They are extremely lucky to walk about without any debts.

    53 million is a lot closer to Giphy's actual value than 400 million or 315 million. If not, there would have been others in line to bid over 300 million.

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