The news: Meta won a major legal victory after a federal judge ruled its Instagram and WhatsApp acquisitions do not violate US antitrust law, per Bloomberg Law and CNBC.
Judge James Boasberg said the FTC failed to show Meta currently holds monopoly power and rejected the agency’s attempt to exclude TikTok and YouTube from the competitive field—emphasizing that both platforms offer “nearly identical” features and directly compete with Meta for attention. The decision came weeks after Meta reported another strong quarter, including $51.24 billion in Q3 revenues, up 24% YoY.
Why it matters: This ruling is one of the most consequential antitrust losses for the FTC in years, and it hinges on a simple fact: User attention has diversified so sharply that Meta can’t plausibly be called a monopoly.
Boasberg repeatedly cited how TikTok and YouTube now siphon the same user time Meta once dominated. Internal records from both platforms showed they view Meta as a serious competitor—undercutting claims that Meta boxed out rivals through past acquisitions.
Usage data across Meta’s competitors among US adults reinforces the point:
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TikTok: Users spent 19 minutes per day in 2023, declining to 18 minutes through 2027.
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Meta (Facebook + Instagram): Holding steady at 38 minutes per day through 2027.
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YouTube: The clear winner, rising from 35 minutes in 2023 to 44 minutes by 2027.
The trajectory is unmistakable: TikTok is cooling, Meta is stable, and YouTube continues to grow. No single platform holds user attention outright, which is precisely the environment that made the FTC’s case so difficult to win.
Meanwhile, Reels now drives half of all time spent on Instagram and is growing 20% YoY. Experiments like topic-based Reels controls, a CTV Reels app, and linked episodic Reels show how aggressively Meta is leaning into short-form video and AI-powered discovery—areas where TikTok and YouTube set the pace.
Key takeaway for marketers: The ruling reinforces that Meta sits in a highly competitive attention economy—defined not by product originality but by platforms racing to hold user time. TikTok and YouTube’s gravitational pull didn’t make Meta more inventive; they simply proved that no single player controls engagement, weakening the FTC’s case and shaping where Meta focuses its product investments.
If user attention is concentrated across YouTube, TikTok, and Meta, then advertiser planning should follow that center of gravity—not just one platform.
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Prioritize short-form video as the connective tissue. Reels, TikTok videos, and YouTube Shorts all command significant daily time and are converging toward similar behaviors and creative expectations.
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Build serialized storytelling, not one-off assets. TikTok’s episodic formats, YouTube’s multi-part Shorts, and Instagram’s linked Reels all reward continuity and narrative arcs.
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Design for cross-screen consumption. As YouTube expands CTV reach, Meta tests Reels on TV, and TikTok gains traction on living-room screens, creatives must work on vertical mobile feeds and horizontal television.
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Lean into platform-native AI tools. Meta’s creative automation, TikTok’s smart editing tools, and YouTube’s AI-assisted production all help scale iterations without losing relevance to each platform’s culture.
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Diversify spend across the big three to hedge algorithmic volatility. No platform truly controls attention. Spreading budgets across Meta, TikTok, and YouTube reflects the fragmented consumption patterns the judge highlighted.
TikTok and YouTube’s gave Meta the competitive proof it needed in court. That competitive pressure will continue shaping Meta’s roadmap, and advertisers should plan for a Meta ecosystem that is more video-heavy, more AI-personalized, and built for higher-yield impressions rather than bigger user bases.